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Comment Re:Which TV manufacturers are still making their o (Score 1) 36

LG, maybe...

Probably not for long. You may as well buy that no-name TV made in Vietnam now, because name brands have ceased to mean anything in this space. Just about everyone followed RCA and GE and Philco, who all stopped making sets in the 80's, and made all their TV money licensing their names to cheap Asian third parties. There hasn't been a real RCA TV since 1986.

Comment Re:Zoning (Score 1) 86

Oh the day has come when people look at vile, despicable anti-capitalist actions in cities and think "lets do the same thing in farmlands".

Zoning laws, not high taxes, are the reason people are fleeing California.

Uh, it's both, and crime too.

The lack of multifamily housing (condos and apartment buildings) is why housing got so expensive.

Housing got expensive because California become like New York City: A place where the young want to be because its "the center of it all", which creates luxury pricing conditions for everything, not just housing. As packed as LA and the Bay Area have become, you're only going to get more apartments by seizing single family homes by eminent domain and tearing them down. That's not America, and even in California, that'll get you a fucking riot. Go on, try it and see.

Comment Re:Even better: no cars at all (Score 1) 166

We need to eliminate car dependency and give people a choice of transportation. Freedom of mobility includes freedom to not travel by automobile. Side benefits include less pollution.

Bullshit. You already have that in cities. People have a variety of choices. Every big city in the US has both bus and light rail systems with very few exceptions (Cincinnati, for one). EVERY city of medium size on up has a bus system. What you really want is to force your post title on people: no cars at all. Your whole aim has nothing to do with "choice".

Comment Sure you can (Score 1) 26

If you build a dangerous theme park and I buy it from you, I take responsibility when kids get mangled.

And PE is absolutely a terrible model for any software with a security aspect. They will always strip maintenance to the bone and PE backwater shops don't exactly have the best and brightest banging on their doors anyway.

After we were bought by a massive firm, one of the (many) things that bugged me was losing control of my vendors. Instead of making our own deals, now I tell a centralized procurement department what I need. It still causes problems and bugs me, but one thing they do is evaluate vendor capabilities. And they really don't like PE-owned software, for exactly this sort of reason. SolarWinds kicked them in the nuts on that one and they're not eager for a repeat.

This isn't a fluffy hippy saying "I don't like breakers and takers", this is a Dow 50 CTO saying "PE's business model is not compatible with security-critical software".

Comment Re:Because magic (Score 1) 84

I'm not talking about Joe Random's laptop, I'm talking about systems involved in commerce that are exposed to attack. You want at least 60 bits of entropy right now; if you're monitoring competently you'll notice the attack well before there's significant risk of success. Better not to expose an access path at all, of course, but sometimes it can't be avoided.

Diceware or whatever is fine, I guess, but in our environment I don't care about typability. End user passwords only have to be entered once a week or so. Access to accounts with elevated privileges is not an everyday thing here, and is gated.

But hey, do what you want, I don't manage your machines.

Comment Re:Because magic (Score 1) 84

Password storage is the same whether or not you use a robot-poop password.

I use Hashicorp Vault at home, because I tend to dogfood the services I run at work. But that's a bit ridiculous, I don't recommend it.

We also run a local Bitwarden installation at work, that's generally for nontechnical users and the dedicated programming staff (although I repeat myself).

For normal people, I recommend some password manager with local storage not tied to a browser, and ideally not tied to your OS. But it depends on how competent the user is.

Why are you using four character passwords? I don't know what your threat model looks like, but a cat might "guess" that, bouncing on your keyboard.

Comment Because magic (Score 4, Interesting) 84

Because people don't know how things work, and treat the robots like oracles.
"But ChatGPT said..." is the new "I saw it on television, it must be true."

If you're not doing something like

< /dev/urandom tr -dc _A-A-a-z-0-9 | head -c30

or some tool that does something similar, you already have problems.

Comment More like (Score 2) 21

Plain old faceplant failure.

If you want to troll, at least be entertaining.

The thing that makes this so utterly stupid is, "all resources" of what? That embedded system in the pregnancy tester that troll will never have a use for, or the huge distributed clusters they're not smart enough to know what to do with?

And I guess it also thinks operating systems should not use available resources?

Anyway, the story telling is good. History always is, but this is also useful for pointing out how contingent things like this are - if Theo hadn't mirrored early versions, or if Linus got possessive at the wrong time, something else may have ended up in the "Linux" niche.

Small actions can have major downstream effects, but you can't know in advance which ones matter. There are several different lessons in there, depending on what you want to focus on.

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