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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Will You Get the A(H1N1) Vaccine? Post 302368285 by Neo on Wednesday 4th of November 2009 01:50:50 PM
Old 11-04-2009
I agree completely with Corona688.

The A(H1N1) vaccine, as made by Sanofi Pasteur, is made by the same procedure as the seasonal flu vaccine. Basically, they take an attenuated (shorted piece) of a dead virus and make the vaccine, so it is next to impossible to get H1N1 from the vaccine.

Everyone should get immunized because it is good for overall public health. As Corona said, each person who is immunized stops "viral growth" because they are not infectious.

Also, the cost of the vaccine is small compared to the misery (for you and everyone around you) if you do get it.

I wish I could get it here in Northern Thailand, but I can't. It is not available to people who are not government officials, royalty, etc.

FWIW, I get the seasonal flu vaccine every year and keep my immunizations up to date for a number of reasons. One, I don't like to get sick and Two, I consider it my social responsibility to immunize against infectious diseases.

If the vaccine could be transported via FedEx and not destroyed due to temperature, I would ask someone to go get a dose of A(H1N1) vaccine and FedEx to me in this primitive place I live and work!
 
S3QLLOCK(1)							       S3QL							       S3QLLOCK(1)

NAME
s3qllock - Make trees on an S3QL file system immutable SYNOPSIS
s3qllock [options] <directory> DESCRIPTION
S3QL is a file system for online data storage. Before using S3QL, make sure to consult the full documentation (rather than just the man pages which only briefly document the available userspace commands). The s3qllock command makes a directory tree in an S3QL file system immutable. Immutable trees can no longer be changed in any way whatso- ever. You can not add new files or directories and you can not change or delete existing files and directories. The only way to get rid of an immutable tree is to use the s3qlrm command. s3qllock can only be called by the user that mounted the file system and (if the file system was mounted with --allow-other or --allow-root) the root user. This limitation might be removed in the future (see issue 155). RATIONALE
Immutability is a feature designed for backups. Traditionally, backups have been made on external tape drives. Once a backup was made, the tape drive was removed and locked somewhere in a shelf. This has the great advantage that the contents of the backup are now permanently fixed. Nothing (short of physical destruction) can change or delete files in the backup. In contrast, when backing up into an online storage system like S3QL, all backups are available every time the file system is mounted. Nothing prevents a file in an old backup from being changed again later on. In the worst case, this may make your entire backup system worthless. Imagine that your system gets infected by a nasty virus that simply deletes all files it can find -- if the virus is active while the backup file system is mounted, the virus will destroy all your old backups as well! Even if the possibility of a malicious virus or trojan horse is excluded, being able to change a backup after it has been made is generally not a good idea. A common S3QL use case is to keep the file system mounted at all times and periodically create backups with rsync -a. This allows every user to recover her files from a backup without having to call the system administrator. However, this also allows every user to accidentally change or delete files in one of the old backups. Making a backup immutable protects you against all these problems. Unless you happen to run into a virus that was specifically programmed to attack S3QL file systems, backups can be neither deleted nor changed after they have been made immutable. OPTIONS
The s3qllock command accepts the following options: --debug activate debugging output --quiet be really quiet --version just print program version and exit EXIT STATUS
s3qllock returns exit code 0 if the operation succeeded and 1 if some error occurred. SEE ALSO
The S3QL homepage is at http://code.google.com/p/s3ql/. The full S3QL documentation should also be installed somewhere on your system, common locations are /usr/share/doc/s3ql or /usr/local/doc/s3ql. COPYRIGHT
2008-2011, Nikolaus Rath 1.11.1 August 27, 2014 S3QLLOCK(1)
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