Comment \o/ (Score 1) 45
This is clearly a disguised hunt for covert donut factories.
This is clearly a disguised hunt for covert donut factories.
This is taking painkillers after you've stabbed yourself in the face for no reason.
Pretty much everything....
And to spawn-camp others.
What should be of interest to slashdotters isn't the irony of someone associated with cryptography losing their private key, but that there exists an open source system to securely allow voting and also to absolutely verify that the vote was counted. All while still maintaining anonymity. Barring the issue of losing private keys on the part of those administering the vote, this sort of system is very interesting, and really could be used to promote voter engagement and democracy. I had heard of it before, but kind of forgot about it.
If even Japan can see the crazy, that's saying something.
How do you know your mouse isn't faulty?
Chatbots were a lot stupider and more incoherent then, yes.
Are there eels in your hovercraft?
I get the idea why remote AI features could be a good trojan horse to get you to send your data into the cloud, but it doesn't make sense to think local AI would be such a trojan horse.
Ahh, the optimism of n00bs - I kind of miss it.
That's the inherent problem with classes, you have to teach 30+ students the same but they're not all capable of learning at the same pace or in the same way.
Kids who can't keep up fall behind, while those that are faster get bored and start to misbehave so they get labelled as troublemakers.
You also have the peer pressure from other kids, who will mock or even bully the top and bottom percentages of the class respectively, discouraging them from participating.
Catering to each child and teaching them at their own pace is obviously going to work best, but it doesn't scale to a school system.
If one or both parents is free to teach the kids that's great, but there are many cases where they aren't - some parents don't give a shit and are happy to send their kids off to school, many parents have to work and simply don't have time to teach the kids even if they would be willing/able to do so, and some simply don't have the ability to teach.
We do need some sort of age verification system, but we need it to be designed in a way that protects privacy.
We've had such a system for thousands of years: parents.
...If you want these things, then you will pay for a good public education.
If you want those things, you will stay as far away from the public school system as you can manage. The public school system hampered my education and employment prospects, and nearly shut them down entirely. My mom taught me all the useful stuff at home, before the public school system started undoing it all.
I was semi-proficient in the three R's by the time I was 5. My learning pace slowed as I proceeded through the grades, and my desire to learn was all but dead by the time I graduated from High School. The public school system killed it.
My major learning interests focused around computer programming, which I had to learn completely on my own. Even the programming classes in High School (which were experimental at the time) discouraged exploring programming beyond the course's tiny box, and taught students NOTHING. I had to teach the programming teacher how to program. It was ridiculous, and was par for the public school course.
Homeschooling can hardly do any worse than public schooling.
"If value corrupts then absolute value corrupts absolutely."