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Comment Re:Thumbprint (Score 1) 65

Would this work in the US? (The US credit bureaus allow you to add a "Statement" to your account.) (I know that fingerprints can be copied and faked but this would probably stop a lot of opportunistic fraud.)

Nice idea, but sadly it would not work in the current system. For years I have called credit card companies in advance to make a statement that I am traveling to a foreign country so don't put my charges on hold when I use my card there. First charge, they always ignore the statement and put my card on hold until they can contact me. After that they will allow it to be used. No credit company is going to follow any special instructions from the consumer given to a rating agency. Sometimes lenders will not even check for a freeze on credit at the rating agency and will issue a card- so you can't even depend upon that.

They are simply going to have to stop using SSNs as authenticator values and come up with something more secure.

Comment Re:The same as before with one exception (Score 1) 465

It's a trick question. If a new version of a browser is so important to you, you don't have a life.

Maybe that was true a decade ago, but not today. There's two types of people who have good reason to care about their browser choice: 1) Professionals who do much of their work through the web, and 2) people who spend a significant amount of their time online. These days, it's not that uncommon anymore for people with quite an active life to still spend a significant amount of time online. Of course, that trend is changing as web services evolve, but I think there's still enough browser interaction by normal people that a browser is an important thing.

But it's the first group that I feel is most affected. Many professionals use their browser extensively for work, and with the rise of JavaScript based web apps, I don't think that trend is shrinking anytime soon. If you spend 9+ hours a day using a piece of software to make your living, how it works is vitally important to you.

I work for a web hosting company. Obviously, many departments here view a lot of websites. However, most of our browser time is actually interacting with our internal web applications, along with a lot of googling. Depending on the department, the work can be very fast paced and can require a lot of juggling issues. TreeStyle Tabs is one extension that is irreplaceable for us, and is probably the single largest reason why most of the people here feel like we cant leave Firefox. GreaseMonkey/Scriptish is another. Of course, each person has their own personal suite of tools which they rely on to get their work done, and many of those tools are Firefox addons.

I'm not implying that we couldn't work without Firefox. Many people already gave up on Firefox a while back, and with each change, more people leave. What I am saying is that browser choice can legitimately be a huge factor for many people. If the web just isn't really your thing, that's fine, but for many of us, it's a significant piece of what we do.

Comment Re: Outsourcing is just a way (Score 1) 172

All systems fail eventually. The better question is; how does a system handle failure and evolve? In the case of capitalism; we don't know yet. Hopefully the next system is kind to Americans of all income levels.

That depends on how you define "failure". If you exclude normal business cycle ups and downs, the Free Market has never failed, but we haven't seen it fully at work in our lifetime. As the US founders told us, once the people learn to "vote themselves a raise", they tend to destroy the framework that makes them free. Fortunately, the free market typically works to the extent it is implemented.

I'm also not certain what you mean by "kind" in the sense that an economic system can be. In economics, kindness to one person is unkindness to another. To give somebody something that nobody wants to give him requires that somebody is forced to give up something that otherwise would have belonged to him. Overall, in more capitalist societies, there's a much greater amount of resources and luxuries available to the poor than in communist societies. For instance, I don't know any of the 99% protesters who would want to live in North Korea for better living conditions or because that economy would be more kind to them. The problem isn't an economic problem.

Here, we are seeing the market manipulated by legislation, but the market still wins out. Higher minimum wage, tougher employment laws, health care requirements, and higher taxes made it more practical to hire outside of the country. However, because there is still competition, the consumers demanded a better product, and even though it is more expensive, have decided that it's worth the cost. To the extent the market was available, it has worked. If we were to allow the market to be more free from legislation, we would be able to have even more value and a better distribution of capital. In a perfectly capitalist society, outsourcing wouldn't be a bad word. In such a society, it would only be done as long as it is an actual benefit, and wouldn't likely have ended up with the poorly performing outsourcing we know today.

Comment Re:There is no need (Score 1) 89

I agree. Also, even if there were actually harms being done, it would still be a question of whether government involvement would be the correct action. I do not personally think that the government is the right arbiter in this issue. The government has never been in the business of promoting free and open anything. I hate Comcast as much as anybody, but these rules are going to hurt them at all.

There's no rule that says that there has to be a good internet connection. If you force all connections to be the same, then you're very likely forcing the lowest common denominator. Also, as the article summary points out, the ISPs will still be able to control connections by arguing that they are preventing piracy or other illegal activity. So, in the end, they may not be able to slow sites, but they will be able to block certain traffic outright and be able to claim that they are doing so to comply with the law. And the big ISPs win because smaller companies who cannot afford to route faster traffic to the more resource heavy locations (or afford to pay for the extra peering which will be mandated) will be forced out of business. So, less competition, more bureaucracy, and you'll still risk having sites or access methods blocked, but now with no recourse.

Comment The government isn't qualified to manage technolog (Score 1) 215

I think that everybody would like "neutral" net, but the question of whether the federal government is the best party to make rulings regarding fairness and technical concerns seems ridiculous. This is the same group that thought that the internet was like pipes, and is run by people who think their Yahoo mail accounts are the best places to store sensitive state emails. I don't know anybody on either side who really thinks that the government is fair. So, to have them decide this sort of thing just seems silly.

Whatever power the government uses now to pass these laws is the same power it's going to use to later restrict our internet usage. Every step we take in this direction is one more step in creating barriers to competition that would make a truly more open internet. Eventually, we'll let them make ISPs a utility, and then there will be rules on who can access the net and how. Don't be surprised if they use those same laws to make most of us criminals for accessing the net through unapproved means. Sure, all of that is still a little way off, and this doesn't directly lead to that, but it's a step in that direction, and a very hard one to reverse. Regardless, it's a step in the wrong direction. I say that we should get the government out of controlling technology.

Submission + - Let's Encrypt: Wildcard Certificates Coming January 2018 (letsencrypt.org) 1

jawtheshark writes: Let’s Encrypt will begin issuing wildcard certificates in January of 2018.

A wildcard certificate can secure any number of subdomains of a base domain (e.g. *.example.com). This allows administrators to use a single certificate and key pair for a domain and all of its subdomains, which can make HTTPS deployment significantly easier.

Submission + - CNN critic who posted on Reddit may have been threated with revealing identity (theintercept.com) 16

evolutionary writes: CNN appears to be giving veiled threats at a Reddit user who posted critical comments about the media giant. After an apology was given by the Reddit user (possibly under fear upon discovering CNN had his identity) CNN stated "CNN reserves the right to publish his identity should any of that change."

Comment You make "stealing" sound like a good thing. (Score 1) 130

If by "stealing" you mean, "having another exact copy of something that somebody else has", then sure, I would love it if everybody "steals" and were "stolen from". If it were possible that somebody could have my car, and I get to keep it, too, I would want as many people as wanted it to have a copy. My car, like games, are capital. A system where there is more capital is a system where we're all better off. The reason why most of us don't want people taking things from us is not because we don't want other people to have stuff, but because we don't want to lose our stuff. Gaining Intellectual Property doesn't take anything away from the person who had it. It just adds to the people who have it.

But, isn't that taking the potential away from another person to make money? Yes, it is. However, there are lots of things that take away a person's ability to make money. If everybody makes horse carts and I make a car, I reduce the ability of horse cart manufacturers to make money. But what if they're really good at it and really really like to make money from it? I don't think that most people would consider that a good enough reason to not make cars. If your business model or current occupation doesn't give you profit that you want, then it's not up to other people to help you make it work. Just find another industry. Remove the artificial barriers and let people decide if and how they would like to support your work. So, reducing the ability for somebody to make money off a product by itself is not good reason to restrict an action. Creating artificial barriers to access something for the sole sake of creating a market is a bad idea and reduces overall capital. If a product is good, then there will be a natural model for it to make money.

So, what about the incentive to create good works of art or games, etc.? I believe that thinking is a more recent invention. There has been literature, works of art, games, and many other types of intellectual exchange long before there was a government restricting access to it. People sometimes make these things for fun, or as a hobby, or by commission from somebody who just wants them to exist. However, not everything that is free as in liberty is free as in beer. There's lots of FOSS out there which is made by people who do get paid for their work. Sometimes, the software is made by people who just want it to exist and be shared. Sometimes, it's to share support. Another example is convenience. I just bought a book the other day from a book store that contained nothing but works in the public domain. I knew that I could just as easily go home, take a copy of the table of contents, and download the whole thing myself and print it out if I wanted and be completely within my legal rights. But the book was there, and at a good price, and I liked it. They made a profit, and no copyright law would have been required.

Sure, there's content out there that may be better because the extra funding that copyright laws provide. Also, I think that maybe having some protections for inventors to allow them to recoup cost of development can help provide an incentive. However, I would rather have both those good things gone than to have to endure the current copyright situation where Disney holds copyrights on things generations after the creator it is dead (which they copied originally from the public domain). However, even in the most proper use of copyrights, you aren't exactly taking away a thing. It may be illegal, and that may make it wrong by definition, but it certainly is not harmful in the same sense as stealing a car, and may instead actually benefit society as a whole.

Comment You thought it would hurt big business? (Score 1) 83

You thought, even for a moment, that a government legislation affecting the market would actually hurt big business? Why? Is that what you think usually happens?

Of course they fought it. It takes work and money to re-structure your company to compensate for new rules like that. However, in the end, any time you make more laws that restrict the freedom of buyers and sellers to freely exchange capital, somebody is going to try to use those rules to their advantage, and the winner will likely be the group with most capital and interest in directing that system. At the very least, the laws will create a further barrier to entry into the market, thus preventing competition, which is the one tool that would cause them to cater to their customers.

Expect to see more of this. At some point, people will get mad and they'll try to make more laws to stop this, and then these companies will re-structure to take advantage of those laws. At some point, people will get mad, and they'll convince the government to declare internet as a utility, and then these companies will gain government funding and become completely immune to customer complaints. What does customer satisfaction matter when there's no competition?

Submission + - Stack Clash Linux Flaw Enables Root Access; Patch Now (threatpost.com)

msm1267 writes: Linux, BSD, Solaris and other open source systems are vulnerable to a local privilege escalation vulnerability known as Stack Clash that allows an attacker to execute code at root.

Major Linux and open source distributors have made patches available today, and systems running Linux, OpenBSD, NetBSD, FreeBSD or Solaris on i386 or amd64 hardware should be updated soon.

The risk presented by this flaw, CVE-2017-1000364, becomes elevated especially if attackers are already present on a vulnerable system. They would now be able to chain this vulnerability with other critical issues, including the recently addressed Sudo vulnerability, and then run arbitrary code with the highest privileges, said researchers at Qualys who discovered the vulnerability.

The vulnerability was found in the stack, a memory management region on these systems. The attack bypasses the Stack guard-page mitigation introduced in Linux in 2010 after attacks in 2005 and 2010 targeted the stack.

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