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Businesses

Apple Says It Restricted Screen Time-like Apps Due To Concerns Over Children Privacy (fastcompany.com) 52

Apple has issued a rare public statement following a report by the New York Times on Saturday that alleged Apple was cracking down on apps that its Screen Time feature emulates. From a report: The Times story says that over the past year, Apple has removed or restricted at least 11 of the 17 apps that offer Screen Time-like features. Screen Time is a feature on iOS 12 and later that allows a user to see how much time they spend on their iPhone, what apps they use the most, and the ability for the user or parents of the users to set limitations on the apps. While it's true that Apple has removed some of the apps from the App Store since the company introduced its Screen Time software, the company's senior vice president of worldwide marketing, Phil Schiller, said the Times did not publish the full reason Apple gave them as to why some of the competing apps were pulled. From Apple's response: Over the last year, we became aware that several of these parental control apps were using a highly invasive technology called Mobile Device Management, or MDM. MDM gives a third party control and access over a device and its most sensitive information including user location, app use, email accounts, camera permissions, and browsing history. We started exploring this use of MDM by non-enterprise developers back in early 2017 and updated our guidelines based on that work in mid-2017.

MDM does have legitimate uses. Businesses will sometimes install MDM on enterprise devices to keep better control over proprietary data and hardware. But it is incredibly risky -- and a clear violation of App Store policies -- for a private, consumer-focused app business to install MDM control over a customer's device. Beyond the control that the app itself can exert over the user's device, research has shown that MDM profiles could be used by hackers to gain access for malicious purposes.

Comment Re:As Molly says, (Score 2) 144

Given the numbers above, the average transaction cost is about $22 at $0.10/kWh. And it's only increasing with time. With costs like that, Bitcoin no longer makes sense for normal, everyday purchases. Why does Bitcoin have this amazing staying power? Why can't another cryptocurrency with cheaper transactions supplant it?

Comment Pixel 1 XL? (Score 1) 291

Does it make sense to buy the Pixel 1 XL 128GB now that it has come down in price? It still comes with the headphone jack and Google's OS updates. The Pixel 2's lack of headphone jack is a no-go for me. The USB-C headphone adapter is too fragile. Hunting for good sounding Bluetooth earbuds is unappealing to me (plus expensive, plus the battery charging and relatively quick failure..).
Businesses

Equifax Will Offer Free Credit Locks for Life, New CEO Says (bloomberg.com) 174

Equifax will debut a new service that will permanently give consumers the ability to lock and unlock their credit for free. From a report: The service will be introduced by Jan. 31, Chief Executive Officer Paulino do Rego Barros Jr. wrote in a Wall Street Journal op-ed Wednesday, a day after taking the helm. The company will also extend the sign-up period for TrustedID Premier, the free credit-monitoring service it's offering all U.S. consumers, he said. "The service we are developing will let consumers easily lock and unlock access to their Equifax credit files," Barros wrote. "You will be able to do this at will. It will be reliable, safe and simple. Most significantly, the service will be offered free, for life." Barros was named interim CEO on Tuesday, less than three weeks after Equifax disclosed that hackers accessed sensitive data for 143 million U.S. consumers.

Comment Re:What genius!! (Score 2) 135

What I wonder is, say you have a 5V ADC. Using their technique, could you drive a 15V (max) signal into the ADC and effectively triple your resolution? You're still using all your bits to measure a 5V range... so if that's the case then it truly is quite groundbreaking.

It may be groundbreaking, but not for the reason advertised in the paper/article/summary. From a quick look at this paper, ADC power dissipation is proportional to f * 2^(2*n), where f is the sampling rate and n is the number of bits per sample. High performance ADCs are constrained by power dissipation, which limits either sampling rate or resolution. What these guys are probably trying to do is constrain n. By allowing signals larger than the ADC input range, and then unwrapping them in software, they increase the effective number of bits. Even if they gain only 2 bits by doing this, this is a factor of 16 advantage in power dissipation (but how does the self-resetting ADC compare to normal ADCs in terms of power?). In any case, the article seems to be hyping a non-existent advantage (sampling signals exceeding the nominal ADC range - why not just attenuate the signal and use a higher resolution ADC?), but does not mention the real advantage (power dissipation).

Comment Re:What genius!! (Score 3, Informative) 135

I'm an EE. This concept is interesting to me, but then I'm left wondering how they really tackle the problem of signal limits. It's not just that ADC that limits the signal. The amplifiers in the chain also do it. Maybe I should just read about it. The whole self-resetting ADC concept just strikes me as odd. I have a feeling it was invented to improve the dynamic range or sampling rate or reduce the power usage of ADCs, but not to magically sample arbitrarily large signals.

Comment Asteroid Redirect Mission (Score 1) 310

The congresscritters also heavily criticized the Asteroid Redirect Mission (ARM):

"This is a misguided mission without a mission, without a launch date, and without ties to exploration goals," concluded Rep. Lamar Smith (R-TX). "It's just a time-wasting distraction."

From the looks of it, this mission will probably not receive funding. It's a bit of a shame. It would have been a good opportunity to start developing asteroid mining technology. Perhaps no one is ready for that yet.

Comment Re:Cap on comment scores (Score 1) 1839

The +5 cap is good, but the "karma bonus" is not great. It basically makes +1 and +2 the same. I know that I can disable the karma bonus, but then many +5 comments will appear as +4, which is not great either. I'd like the ability to quickly spot the top modded comments and also see all comments with just one positive mod on them.

Comment Re:You must be new here (Score 1) 1839

I'd like to add that if any changes are made to the moderation system at all, the ability to make controversial comments visible should be a priority. Just an observation: controversial comments (even if modded into oblivion) tend to generate a lot of replies that themselves are highly modded. So there are two criteria to detect these: the total number of mods (in either direction) and the number (and score) of the replies. To allow users some control over display of such comments, maybe promote them one level: from not shown to abbreviated, or from abbreviated to full.

Comment Re:The author really is paranoid (Score 1) 373

This long article is worth a read to the end. The author acknowledges the possibility that his anecdotes are just the results of coincidences or him networking, like you suggested. The article is actually humorous and designed to make people think about the direction our society is heading. His anecdotes about the visit to the NSA data center, the gun show, the tire shop, the hot springs are all well written. This article is by no means a list of complaints, like you suggest. He makes fun of people that are truly paranoid (seemingly to the point of insanity), while raising some unsettling thoughts as a side-effect.

Comment Re:Kickstarter Needed (Score 1) 240

I've also been eyeing this project, but haven't tried it on any of my machines yet. In the reddit /r/sysadmin thread people seem quite critical of this script. There is credible opinion that these updates will be required for windows to continue updating in the future, so it's dangerous to remove them; and that privacy cannot be achieved anymore while running Microsoft operating systems.

Comment Re:hope there's a "no videos" flag in HTML5's futu (Score 1) 220

Why is this modded +5 Informative? Youtube HTML5 video still autoplays even with this option set to false. Apparently they get around this by loading the video from a script. I basically had to disable HTML5 on Youtube to get it to stop autoplaying. Flash, thankfully, can be blocked until user permission.

Comment Re: Looking more and more likely all the time... (Score 1) 518

Check out "Pathological Science" for some cautionary tales. It's kind of sad how enthusiasm for EM Drive seems to be rising just like for all those past examples, while full scientific rigor has not yet been achieved in the experiments (the experimenters themselves admit this... a sign of progress). I wonder if we will eventually see an experimental satellite propelled by this drive... Part of me thinks that is a waste of money. But another part thinks that all the debate on this topic is an even bigger economic drain through time wasting. So maybe launching an EM drive into space is worth it, just to end this pointless debate.

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