1 |
> On top of that Cyrillic letters like "m", "i", "c", and "o" are |
2 |
> considered different from their English equivalants. Security experts |
3 |
> showed proof-of-cocept attacks where clicking on "microsoft.com" can |
4 |
> take you to a hostile domain (queue the jokes). |
5 |
|
6 |
That's true, though registrars are filtering for it now. Also, I just checked, |
7 |
e.g. firefox always builds with unicode support (it would have trouble with a |
8 |
lot of websites otherwise). |
9 |
|
10 |
(: ˙˙˙ǝpoɔᴉun sǝop oslɐ ʇuǝᴉlɔ lᴉɐɯ ɹnoʎ uǝɥʇ ¿sᴉɥʇ pɐǝɹ noʎ uɐɔ 'ʍʇq |
11 |
|
12 |
> I don't speak or read |
13 |
> or write any languages which have thousands of unique characters. |
14 |
> Seeing Chinese spam "as it was intended to be seen", is not a priority |
15 |
> for me. |
16 |
|
17 |
Not even Klingon?! |
18 |
|
19 |
-- |
20 |
Andreas K. Hüttel |
21 |
dilfridge@g.o |
22 |
Gentoo Linux developer |
23 |
(council, qa, toolchain, base-system, perl, libreoffice) |