Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:Bitcoin explained (Score 1) 262

Will slashdot ever stop upmoding this copy/paste spam? It was kinda funny the first time it was posted. By now, most of slashdot has seen the joke multiple times already.

People, if you're into cryptography, infosec, parallel programming, economics, or finance, you will probably find bitcoin interesting. If you don't find it interesting, however, then don't click on bitcoin stories. And for the love of Bob don't paste tired old joke spam into such stories.

AI

Kurzweil: Human-Level Machine Translation By 2029 186

An anonymous reader writes "In a video interview with the Huffington Post, noted futurist Ray Kurzweil predicts that machines will reach human levels of translation quality by the year 2029. However, he was quick to highlight that even major technological advances in translation do not replace the need for language learning. 'Even the best translators can't fully translate literature,' he pointed out. 'Some things just can't be expressed in another language.'"

Comment Re:This Is Where Slashdot Fails Me (Score 1) 642

claiming that this volatile currency would not be traded long

Bitcoins are being traded. A single, independent exchange is down. But if you knew how bitcoins worked, you would realize that you don't even need an exchange to trade them.

So in conclusion: can bitcoins currently be traded? Yes. But can they be bought/sold for US dollars? Also yes. Are your predictions proving correct? Not at all.

Now that some big player(s) have cashed out

Did you make that part up? Which big player are you referring to? According to the MTGOX exchange, they were hacked and the hacker sold stolen bitcoins. This cannot be honestly described as "a big player cashing out."

Comment Re:Dear Customers... (Score 1) 219

Wrong. The secret value in SecurID tokens is not some private key in a PKI. It's just a random number. There is no reason RSA couldn't just write these random numbers to write-only media and delete all other copies after sending them to the customer. There is no reason to keep them accessible on the network--let the support people sneaker-net the numbers if the customer loses theirs! That's the appropriate level of security for something as sensitive as this.

Of course, I'm sure they know this. The real reason RSA kept their customers' seed records vulnerable on the wire was so that they could outsource their support to third world crop-pickers at $1/hour. I've spoken with RSA support flunkies--they've never even seen the product they support, in many cases. RSA is walmart-quality security.

Comment Re:Go Tim (Score 4, Insightful) 480

Information and money are not the same thing. The developed world has universally recognized that education is a right. Information fits hand-in-hand with that.

Should wealth be a right? Well, probably, but that's not possible. Let's put that question aside until we invent replicators and infinite energy sources. Today, however, we do have the means to give everyone education and information.

Slashdot Top Deals

I have hardly ever known a mathematician who was capable of reasoning. -- Plato

Working...