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Comment Re:So why do I trust the notaries? (Score 1) 127

*Ideally* In the CA relationship, you would at least have assurance that the site being validated worked explicitly with a trustworthy CA. In the reputation system, the site being validated didn't work with anyone and has no way to authoritatively 'tell' someone they got compromised.

A CA could be one such authentication step. Consider a network of independent notaries to which the CAs could securely push public certificates and tie them to a domain name.
Now you have to compromise the CA (or a sufficient number of the notaries, some perhaps run by the CAs themselves), and you have to perform the MITM upstream, not downstream, so the perspectives-like notaries will still see a consistent view.

Comment Re:So why do I trust the notaries? (Score 2) 127

-DNSSEC secured results enumerating the CAs the site selected to secure the domain. If DigiNotar signs yourdomain.com and your DNSSEC says 'Thawte', then there is an issue.
-Multiple CAs signing a certificate. If you have 3 or so CAs (all listed in your DNSSEC record of course), then compromising all three would be required to compromise your security.

What does this gain you over storing the cert signature itself in DNSSEC?

Since the people attesting to the authenticity of a certificate have zero 'special' interaction, it remains feasible to fool them.

Nothing prevents a notary from taking extra steps to verify the authenticity of a certificate. That is one of the advantages of the concept: other methods of authentication can be added in a modular way.
In some ways the notary system gives you the security of the strongest of the notaries you trust, and the CA system gives you the security of the weakest of the CAs you trust.

Comment Re:So why do I trust the notaries? (Score 2) 127

if someone MITM's very close to you (think the people who own/control the AP you're connecting through at a hotel), they could MITM *all* of the notaries as well

The communication with the notaries is in all likelihood encrypted and signed with predistributed keys, similar to CA certificates today. That's not a large problem, because ultimately you have to trust the software you are running anyway.
That still retains all the benefits over the CA system that you mention; you get multiple points of trust that all have to be compromised, and if one is compromised you can distrust it with minimal consequences.

Comment Re:Extortion (Score 1) 186

We do have some idea.

We know that Microsoft is approaching this in pretty much the most scummy and mafia-like way possible, using strong-arm tactics to make companies sign NDA agreements to prevent information leaking out that would allow other companies to protect themselves ahead of time.

We know that the patents that we have seen, mostly thanks to B&N having some balls and not falling for the MS's cheap tricks, are dubious and certainly not worth what Microsoft is demanding, given that you can licence Windows 7 for about the same price.

I personally know that I'll do my best to not give MS a dime of my money, though they sure know to take their rent from PC and phone manufacturers, and in fact I'm glad this story came up, because I was about to inadvertently buy some of their hardware, but come to think of it I won't, because who wants to subsidize shit like this?

Robotics

Paralyzed Patients Control Robot With Brain Waves 49

sciencehabit writes with a writeup of a French research paper in Science. From the article: "They're not quite psychic yet, but machines are getting better at reading your mind. Researchers have invented a new, noninvasive method for recording patterns of brain activity and using them to steer a robot. Scientists hope the technology will give 'locked in' patients ... the ability to interact with others and even give the illusion of being physically present ... with friends and family." The really interesting thing here is that people who had not used their limbs in years were able to learn how to control the robot (as well as the control group did) after being trained only an hour a week for six weeks.

Comment Re:Also iD Tech 4 blows (Score 1) 172

To be honest, while id Tech 5 with its heavy focus on textures is an interesting experiment, I'm looking a lot more forward to id Tech 6. It looks like it will use raycasting on sparse voxel octrees, same as the Unlimited Detail guys. That will by all accounts amount to a generational leap in graphics, doing for geometry pretty much what MegaTexturing does for textures.

John Carmack has been talking about voxels since 2008, but the hardware weren't up to it back then. Apparently they're doing research on id Tech 6 now.

While the Unlimited Detail guys have made some promising demos using static geometry with static lightning, I believe rendering a more dynamic game world with animation and varying lightning remains an unsolved problem. I can't wait to see what Carmack and his team can come up with.

Comment Re:follow (Score 1) 212

That would take an hour and a half to heat an adult brain up by 1 Kelvin,

That's an oversimplification assuming the entire brain receives the exact same amount of energy, and that is just the radio transmissions, while a cell phone can also output heat on its own and reflect your body heat.

These "Platonic thought experiment" rebuttals tend to be simplistic to the point of "assuming spherical cows" and ignore the complex interactions of a real biological system. That's not a valid scientific argument, at best it's a plausibility argument.

We didn't think asbestos was a carcinogen but it was. We then thought glass fibers were likely to be carcinogens too, but they weren't.

That's the same amount of 'heating' as 45 minutes of cell phone use, every day.

Any cell phone use comes on top of all that, and some professions could easily spend more than an hour a day on the cell phone. (Though admittedly they'd normally get a hand-free set then.)

It's not enough to come up with some vague correlation if every other verified theory tells us that it just can't happen. A mechanism for the cause has to be proposed (a model), and it has to be shown to be valid rigorously, using double-blind studies and falsifiable experiments.

A correlation can be plenty to work with if you can clearly prove it. If the correlation can not be explained by other established models, or discarded as coincidence, you can then start searching for a underlying mechanism.

John Snow found a correlation between drinking from a certain well and outbreaks of cholera. The mechanism of infection was not known at the time, but even so the correlation was clear and undeniable.

The problem here is rather that they have tested for a correlation and there isn't one. Empirically testing a hypothesis you don't like is not pseudo-science.

Comment Re:follow (Score 2) 212

Personally I doubt that cell phones have any notable effect on cancer rates, but dismissing it simply because the radiation is non-ionizing would be too hasty.

There are plenty of documented carcinogens besides ionizing radiation; irritants, burns, bacteria and various chemicals can all increase your risk of cancer.

The researchers are looking at cell phone use as a whole here. There are a couple of other effects that could plausibly have carcinogenic effects, though it is unlikely.
There's a list of potential issues at Wikipedia.
E.g., holding a cell phone close to your head while talking will cause slight but measurable heating of the brain.

Dismissing out of hand that any of these effects could cause cancer just because you think you understand the physics of radiation interacting with physical matter would be folly, comparable to dismissing asbestos as a carcinogen because you understand the effects of throwing rocks at a person.

Now, at this point there has been extensive studies on the matter, and I feel reasonably convinced that if there is indeed an effect, it is very slight. That was IMO the most likely result from the beginning, but considering the massive scale of worldwide mobile use, even a small probability of health issues is well worth researching.

Comment Re:And the point of this is? (Score 5, Informative) 277

The Hydrogen Audio Forums tests have traditionally used a sound methodology, it would probably be worth reading up on it before you comment, lest you make a fool out of yourself.

They will not be trying to measure how 'good' each codec sounds, they are trying to measure how close it is to the source material, with a 'perfect score' being statistically indistinguishable.

Transportation

Tesla Will Discontinue the Roadster 523

Attila Dimedici writes "Tesla has announced that their business model has failed. Their basic idea was to sell a boutique electric car to fund the development of a regular consumer electric car. With this announcement they are saying that they did not sell enough of the Roadster to make producing it profitable. If that is the case, it is only a matter of time until Tesla closes its doors. I thought their approach was the most likely to create a successful fully electric car. Although it is possible that the technology they have developed will allow the existing car companies to develop successful fully electric cars, it is a shame that Tesla has failed to become a successful car manufacturer." CT: As a huge number of you pointed out, the linked article is not nearly as doom and gloom as the submitter: Tesla isn't locking the doors and throwing away the keys, they plan on selling a $80k sedan in 2012 with a 300 mile range.

Comment Re:SHA-1 is fine, but go for SHA-512 (Score 2) 223

The SHA family is coming to an end; it's just a matter of time.

An end, but also a beginning; the final selection of the hash algorithm that will become SHA-3 is scheduled for 2012.

The current candidates are all faster than SHA-1 on platforms without hardware acceleration, even with the added security. Unless a weakness is discovered after the standardization, SHA-3 should eventually replace SHA-1 in all security critical applications.

Comment Re:Why? (Score 1) 262

Looks like they're planning to add alpha channels and XMP metadata, as well as a bunch of other more-or-less useful features, like 3d support.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=30_AIEhar-I#t=29m10s

I think the SSIM advantage is adequately documented with the study linked to in TFA, though in the end what it comes down to is visual comparison. The earlier encoder was accused of overoptimising for PSNR, to the detriment of the overall image quality. Hopefully they can get some more heavy-duty psychovisual optimisations applied to both the video and still image encoders for further improvements.

Comment Re:Old Nokia Symbian smartphones (Score 1) 162

Programming for Symbian in Python is pretty neat, but judging by the "TouchStudio" name I would guess this differs by being oriented toward editing on a touchscreen.

I think the question of how to effectively edit code on the go on a small portable device is an interesting question. Typing typically is pretty slow even on the few devices with a dedicated keyboard, and special characters tend to be hard to type.

I personally believe there is promise in a language with a simple structure, maybe something LISPy, intended for a more effective use of the the touch screen than letter-by-letter input. Possibly something similar to Lego's RCX code, where you drag and connect statement, control and value blocks in a pretty intuitive way.

Another possibility would be to have an adaptive keyboard with buttons for keywords and variable names that depend on context. Or program in APL, so commands are just one letter long anyway.

I'd have appreciated if they had provided a video of the editing interface.

Comment Honeycomb (Score 1) 78

Will this be upgradeable to Honeycomb?
I've been thinking for buying a tablet for general surfing and reading, but it looked like a bad time to buy anything, with most next-gen tablets available in March-April at earliest.

This thing seems to have the specs, so I'd be very interested in knowing if it's rootable, if it will run unsigned images, and if there's official plans to provide an upgrade to Android 3.0 at a later time.

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