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Word Processor's Auto-Save Feature Foiled UK Terror Plot

bbc.co.uk

11 points by KJBweb 13 years ago · 10 comments

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KJBwebOP 13 years ago

"Police discovered fragments of text on Dart's laptop that revealed that the pair had used the computer to have a "silent conversation" to avoid possible surveillance bugs.

They would open a word processor document and take it in turns to type, before deleting the text and mistakenly assuming none of it would be stored on the machine.

However forensic experts were able to plough through 2,000 pages of computer code to decipher fragments of what was said."

danielgrieve 13 years ago

Why didn't they just, you know, talk to each other? It sounds as if they were sat next to one another at the same computer...

  • RobertHoudin 13 years ago

    'the pair had used the computer to have a "silent conversation" to avoid possible surveillance bugs'

    • tathagatadg 13 years ago

      So they sit next to each other and just type on the same computer - like pair programming? Sounds boring ... given that mr. god never wrote a compiler to build your logic on top of his specs!

gambiting 13 years ago

"Dart refused to stand when he was sentenced, and said: "I don't wish to stand up, I believe ruling and judging is only for Allah." "

This makes me unbelievably angry. You hear that and you just know that their mental process is just broken, no amount of time spent in prison is going to help.

  • coldtea 13 years ago

    >You hear that and you just know that their mental process is just broken, no amount of time spent in prison is going to help.

    It's not really different to what idealists and reformers have said throughout the ages.

    If you accept the belief in a deity, then nothing about it sounds broken. So, it's not more or less "broken" that Pascal, or Ghandi, or whatever believed in a God.

    And even if you don't accept that belief (ie. think all religious people are "broken"), it's not really different to a revolutionary saying he doesn't recognize the judgement of the state court, etc.

  • arethuza 13 years ago

    I know it is pretty irrational, but the idea that they were going to attack Royal Wootton Bassett really got to me.

  • illuminate 13 years ago

    Reminds me of Kent Hovind, who believed that laws should be applied differently as a "citizen of Heaven".

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