Comment Re:No wonder gov't doesn't get it (Score 1) 86
Aw, damn, Austrialian Federal government. If only.
Aw, damn, Austrialian Federal government. If only.
This guy was going to fill the Federal budget deficit, but no, all the stupid bureaucracy gets in the way.
Oh Great Penguin In The Sky, I want to believe.
But this is Phoronix, so I won't actually believe until I'm playing Portal without Wine.
Think of it as a reminder to the Congress that we know what the Executive is up to, and that we do not approve of such illegal acts and the legalization thereof.
Crime is a social construct, and we've been redefining it since we've had societies.
Let me clarify my statement, though. I am not saying "there are too many instances of crime", as a law-enforcement entity might say; rather, I am saying "there are too many acts which are considered crimes".
There is already too much crime. Civil liability should be enough. If it's unprovoked, simple battery might be in order. But felony?
Stop being so damn blood-thirsty. Breaking somebody's device because they shove it in your face should not ruin lives and occupations.
What about patents? Too busy ATM to check.
The entire concept of security by obscurity acts as a justification for keeping secrets. It often sweeps up information whose release will help users much more than it will help attackers. Once it becomes a sanctioned tool of security, instead of an objective of the security, those who set up and maintain the security lean on obscurity like a crutch.
I realize my argument is an appeal to the slippery slope, but I see it everywhere in society. People, organizations, and governments can get into frames of mind wherein they lose focus of the overall goal of information security and just start obscuring everything, which makes their interactions with others difficult and sometimes hostile.
In fairness, the article itself says as much:
Typing and proling are frowned
on in security. Leaving aside the question whether gathering
information about the attacker, and obscuring the system,
might be useful for security or not, these practices remain
questionable socially. The false positives arising from such
methods cause a lot of trouble, and tend to just drive the
attackers deeper into hiding.
On the other hand, typing and proling are technically
and conceptually unavoidable in gaming, and remain re-
spectable research topics of game theory. Some games can-
not be played without typing and proling the opponents.
Poker and the bidding phase of bridge are all about trying
to guess your opponents’ secrets by analyzing their behav-
iors. Players do all they can to avoid being analyzed, and
many prod their opponents to sample their behaviors. Some
games cannot be won by mere uniform distributions, with-
out analyzing opponents’ biases.
Both game theory and immune system teach us that we
cannot avoid proling the enemy. But both the social ex-
perience and immune system teach us that we must set the
thresholds high to avoid the false positives that the prol-
ing methods are so prone to. Misidentifying the enemy leads
to auto-immune disorders, which can be equally pernicious
socially, as they are to our health.
But inevitably, this kind of caveat is thoroughly ignored by most people. They will only hear something like "Security by Obscurity Now Considered Useful", and a whole new set of administrative roadblocks will be thrown up in the name of security, when in fact it's helping very little, if any; furthermore, those who try to circumvent the new measures to do something they consider to be within the permitted use of the network may be considered security risks (or even malicious entities outright) and will be dealt with as such, when nothing of the sort was intended.
derp
If you think they are going too slow, you have a very different perspective from my own.
Mozilla didn't understand how people were using their browser, and as such, most of them dismissed the fact that their memory usage problems went deeper than mere leaks.
If they don't get those fixes out the door now, they're screwed for sure. Firefox 7 helps---I know, because I've been using it since just before it hit beta---but 8 should be even better than 7 about long-term memory usage.
I realize this is a false dichotomy, but would you really prefer a troll story to this?
Unfortunately for you, it's only 2.4 GHz.
Anyway, last I remembered, OpenWRT was having issues with dual-band 802.11n, though I may not have been paying very much attention, and this may have been resolved if it ever was a problem to begin with.
triple AAA
lol
But seriously, that's bullshit, and you know it.
Dinosaurs who make so-called "AAA titles" don't make Linux games because it costs too much money, one way or another. Management at such places don't want to spend money if they aren't guaranteed a return, which only says how much the bottom line drives everything they do anyway, and good riddance.
Larger companies not yet swallowed by conglomerates have senior devs who may consider Linux and just might have the clout to pull it off, but they can't afford (time, money, energy: take your pick(s)) to pull it off. It's hard to hit a target which moves so differently from commercial software. Heaven forbid trying to get something upstream—a policy which has merits, just not to commercial game creators.
Does "AAA"/"triple-A" even mean anything? I want someone to come along and start saying that they're a quad-A developer working on quad-A games.
However, "Neil deGrasse Tyson" made me do a spit-take.
I actually only learned about Cosmos when the Science Channel showed it with many re-done graphics, but also with enough cuts that I like the DVD version from the 1990s. I would show that version as-is, or I would splice in some of the updated visuals from the Science Channel airings, except that I would re-do the updates that were already appended to most episodes on the DVD version.
And yes, as (I think) someone above said, Brian Cox has a much more Sagan-like delivery than Tyson. Cox's new program feels like Cosmos, though I don't know enough about him to know whether he would dare to make the kind of strong claims Sagan did without being overly confrontational.
I'm trying not to troll here
Try harder
He was not trolling. Do you want to hear trolling?
GGP HAS A 7-DIGIT UID! WHAT A NOOB! AND IT'S NOT EVEN IN THE FIRST TWO MILLION!
GP DESERVES A (Score:5, Flamebait)!
</Rarity>
(No, that isn't trolling either. I just wanted an excuse to link to relevant things. because poni.)
"Only the hypocrite is really rotten to the core." -- Hannah Arendt.