Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:Security through legislation is no security at (Score 1) 206

You must have stopped reading after the second sentence of my post. Please allow me to repeat the third sentence:

It's a transparent and comically unenforceable attempt to keep Russian data precisely where the Russian government wants it: on servers they can put their hands on.

Comment Re:Security through legislation is no security at (Score 1) 206

You're correct that the motivation is fundamentally economic, but it has nothing to do with revenue generated from Russian datacenter leases, which are less than a drop in the bucket compared to the value derived from legally guaranteed physical access to servers for Russian government representatives. You really haven't thought this through, have you?

Comment Security through legislation is no security at all (Score 4, Interesting) 206

As stated in the subject line, security through legislation is no security at all. If anything, this will weaken information security for Russians. It's a transparent and comically unenforceable attempt to keep Russian data precisely where the Russian government wants it: on servers they can put their hands on. I'm genuinely amused.

Comment Re:Great (Score 0) 133

Here we have a fine example of an "undocumented poster" (to use fashionable left wing terminology) making sweeping and emotionally charged bullshit statements about a political party which he or she believes to be an ideological rival of his or her "favorite sports team." I'm shocked, shocked I tell you.

For reference, I'm neither a Republican nor a Democrat, but I am fully in support of you going off to fuck yourself. Have a great day, you spineless little piece of shit.

Comment Re: Data Security Officer (Score 1) 192

Thank you for the first reasonable reply I've received throughout this thread. You've caught the gist of part of what I'm hoping to illuminate here (which is probably far more important in the larger scheme of things), but you haven't seen the full picture yet. I have a challenge for you. Using your own line of reasoning as a premise to be challenged, can you analyze it from an adversarial perspective and develop a proposal for how additional inferences might be made regarding unique identification of medallions in the event that each medallion has been replaced with an arbitrary token? In your deliberations, please consider every facet of the reported data. It's quite apparent that those who have replied to my comments in this thread either (1) haven't directly considered the data themselves, or (2) lack the insight required to observe relationships between apparently unrelated constructs.

In short, under this challenge, I can deliver ~90% of the medallion identifiers using no external information other than full knowledge of the means by which the original medallions are assigned. Given a tiny parcel of additional correlation, I can hit 100%.

I look forward to your reply. By the way, what do you do for a living at the moment?

Comment Re:Not a good sales pitch: (Score 2) 138

The sort of services being offered are easily worth USD $1M/month when you consider who the clients are, the scale of their operations, the degree to which their systems are interconnected with those of other institutions (large and small), and the complexities involved with regulatory/legal/reputation compliance and management. Risk management and threat analysis are not simple subjects.

To put it simply, these aren't your sort of client engagements.

Slashdot Top Deals

Scientists will study your brain to learn more about your distant cousin, Man.

Working...