Forgot your password?
typodupeerror

Comment Re:No (Score 1) 164

> Not exactly, The problem is trust. And if you don't trust the party that authenticated it, then you gain exactly nothing by having it signed by a single party.
> The idea of blockchain is to replace trust in a single party by a chain of signees

And how do you know how to trust them? Blockchain absolutely does not solve the trust challenge. All you blockchain evangelists fail to realise that the reason you own some coins here and there is because at some point you loaded an HTTPS web site, authenticated by a CA that your browsers included, so the trust you place in blockchain is effectively rooted in the implicit trust you have in your operating system, and there's pretty much nothing you can do about it.

Yawn.

Comment "No One Trusts Facebook"? Hahahahahhaa. Non-story. (Score 1) 90

More than 50% of Facebook users have a sub-average concept of trust in the first place. You cannot argue with that.

Most people don't understand Facebook, and they don't get to the point where trust is even a decision.

Most people implicitly trust Facebook for the convenience, and they give a fuck about privacy and censorship, thinking it doesn't apply to them.

So yeah, non-story.

Comment Re:Kick out the SJWs (Score 1) 33

Only 1 point awarded for being a Debian Developer? You've badly misjudged. Our next release will include a click-through license that requires all you idiot men's rights activists to marry your dogs as a condition of using the software.

Can't handle codes of conduct that obligate you to behave like a decent human being? Suck it up, snowflake.

Comment Finite search spaces (Score 1) 31

Machine learning operates within a model, influenced by implementer's bias. Anything it'll ever be able to do will be constrained to lie within the model. There is no way "an AI" will be able to understand human concepts the same way humans do, and in part that's because humans don't learn just by playing Pictionary.

When will this hype subside, so that we can actually focus on the real stuff machine learning can do, without constant conflation with the idea that "general AI" could even ever exist?

Comment Don't fall for the attempt to divert from issue (Score 5, Informative) 280

Android is Free, but Google has woefully neglected it for years. Or rather, they meticulously worked on pulling all functionality into Play Services, while blinding the public into thinking that they are so great in doing open-source.

If they take Android non-free (what does this even mean?), it won't actually make much of a difference to the status quo. I'd hope for the EU to not take any of this, and simply double the fine if they do.

Fuck you, Google.

Comment Lauren Weinstein is on the Google payroll (Score 3, Insightful) 137

I've no evidence for this, but the way he keeps defending big-G in the wake of all the privacy problems we've seen and continue to feel, he's been touting them as being stellar about privacy and that they would never, and bla.

Maybe it's true that unlike Facebook, Google doesn't sell your data. But the main reason for that is that they want to monetise you all by themselves. Also, nothing would stop them from doing so tomorrow.

Gmail innovations here or there, your best bet is to get rid of Google and Facebook, use plugins like uMatrix and Cookie AutoDelete and navigate the Web without splattering your fingerprints everywhere.

Comment matrix.org (Score 5, Informative) 456

Check out matrix.org. It is not only a rich IM solution with all the bells and whistles, including multi-devices end-to-end encryption, but Matrix also provides for bridges and proxies to other networks, so that it can be used to unify communication.

It's only 2.5 years old but has already come quite a way!

https://matrix.org/

Slashdot Top Deals

The price one pays for pursuing any profession, or calling, is an intimate knowledge of its ugly side. -- James Baldwin

Working...