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Comment Re:ENOUGH with the politics! (Score 0) 1094

Or, McDonalds could make a bit less profit. Profits are not guaranteed. They could clear three billion rather than four billion a year, and do just fine. On the other hand, the free market would explode as people could *buy* things again. If they can't understand the concept of limiting their profits, we can tax them until they get the message.

Comment Re:ENOUGH with the politics! (Score 1) 1094

Slashdot is news about Stuff that Matters. If you want pure tech, go to the tech section. The minimum wage matters to all of us; poverty drags everyone down. The minimum wage, adjusted for inflation since it was instituted in 1966, would be around $18 an hour. We've been intentionally pretending we don't understand math for fifty years as people fell back into poverty.

Comment Re:Irresponsible. (Score 1) 120

Other malfunctions have happened in other plane systems, one resulting in the plane shaking the passengers around like dice. All three computers received the same input and made the same mistake. The question is: can we understand that we've overcomplexified systems to the point that they are too unstable to use? We made the same mistake with cars and roadways in the past century once; we kept doubling down on the system's complexity as the carnage mounted, and to this day, we think the answer is better cars rather than toss the original solution out and make something simpler. We're addicted to complexity. MAkes more money, for one thing.

Comment Re:Irresponsible. (Score 1) 120

Airbus created the first commercial craft that were completely computer controlled. QED: they go boom often, and we hear about them often. It's not the brand, it's the belief that computers are the best and only solution in every system case, voting machines to cars to pacemakers to trucks to planes. Those systems will fail spectacularly because the paradigm is to treat them like PCs, updated frequently to fix endless streams of errors, when they should have been working correctly in the first and only place. Computers are "infinite" machines - they can be operated in an infinite number of ways, and that is really bad news when you are trying to control a simple and finite process. We are over-complexifying systems because we can. Every nail gets the same hammer. Bad engineering and it will fail.The question is whether the computer-addicted generation will be able to understand what the problem is.

Comment Too much automation in the wrong places (Score 1) 120

Hyper-complex software, sensor arrays, and mechanical systems will fail. They will always fail; humans cannot anticipate all errors, all possible combinations of factors that can cause death and destruction. Humans can't build autonomous complex systems (no, really, they can't. We've barely started making such things) that can't fail. In this case, can't say that a human pilot or a mechanical backup would have made a dfference, but as the world goes forward, gleefully firing truck drivers and converting cars into remote-controllable computer complexes, such things will be so commonplace as not to be worth reporting. Which will feed back our certainty that all is well. It isn't.

Software

Software Glitch Caused Crash of Airbus A400M Military Transport Aircraft 120

An anonymous reader writes: A software glitch caused the crash of an Airbus A400M military transport aircraft, claims German newspaper Der Spiegel (Google translation). The accident, which happened in Seville on the vehicle's first production test flight on 9 May, killed four crew members. Airbus is investigating the system controlling the aircraft's engines. The early suspicions are that it was an installation problem, rather than a design problem.

Comment Re:Or... (Score 1) 258

The NSA ain't god, and this is *me* saying this. The NSA is an API for the governments's paranoid would-be supergovernment. They just do what they're told, being Slashdotty geeks, and then they go home. Hacking the evoting machines would be... problematic even for their kind of organization.

Much easier if billionaires just buy the voting machine companies and tell a few trusted IT people to install backdoors on the main accumulation points. Auditing is useless if the original votes are uncountable because of anonymity requirements. We trust the accumulated totals. And if you think the Koch bros. and others like them aren't capable of that, then you ain't paying attention.

Comment Re:Or... (Score 1) 258

Canada DID had (last I heard) a nationwide paper voting system. You draw an "X" with a pencil next to your candidate. They counted each card on a table with both parties looking on (It works if one side is not constantly contesting the reading to slow it down intentionally so their boy can win by running down the clock). They finish the count nationwide in three hours. Works, and you can recount in less than a day, if you have to (if one side isn't trying to delay, delay, delay).

I understand the Harper Government is rapidly shoving e-voting down Canada's throat.

Guess why. Go on, guess. Why replace a system that works and can't be cheated with a series of black boxes that can't be trusted? Why would you possibly want to do that. Golly. I can't. Why would they do that... it's like they *want* a system that can be hacked to win, esp. since their side owns the companies, one way or another. Nah, that can't be right. That would be dishonest, and plays to the public's idea that computers are always awesome and better than people.

Comment The problem is in the server, not the clients (Score 1) 258

If a company has a person who has access to the accumulated counts, then that person can change the vote, downstream, upstream, or final destination. The individual computers don't matter; there are no ways, given the constraints, the verify who voted for what - yes, there are established, effective ways of controlling the data, but if you can't audit the entire chain, it doesn't matter. The code, the counts, the data are owned by private companies, and they have established that all of that are their protected trade secrets. Past lawsuits show us that they refuse court orders and countersue, and that they destroy the data, such as it is. Puttering around with geeky analysis of the browsers and malware isn't addressing the problem which is: they who control the machines control the elections. Worrying about the "hackers" on the outside is specious. It's the hackers on the inside.

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