The only solid way to prevent abuses like this would be to get rid of DNS entirely. With IPv6 there are enough addresses that there is no reason to ever change the IP of a server, which means links could just use direct IP addresses. Browsers should have quick and easy ways to bookmark an IP with a default name offered by the site itself, and should resolve those bookmarks like it was a domain name when the user types them into the address bar. Users couldn't just type in an address they saw on a billboard but everybody uses QR codes for that already so it wouldn't be a problem.
Succesful doesn't always mean profitable. SpaceX is struggling to stay afloat, and a way to make it more profitable could be to halt new development (and let go of the R&D staff) and start mass producing the design they already have. Always developing new stuff means you have to constantly redesign your production facilities, increasing cost.
But isn't the back button breaking web apps a good argument to allow it to go back to the previous page? Then your web app wouldn't have to worry about it.
The solution is not less anonymity, but more: if your credit card details are kept secure thiefs can't steal from you, and if you could hide your IP cheaters couldn't DDoS you.
The Play store might be a near monopoly now, but if Google asks for too much money I bet it will see some competition as phone manufacturers might decide to just put another app store on the phone.
I'm guessing restaurants are just the first step. I can see this being very useful when trying to find a place to stay. One call wouldn't be a problem, but often I have to make a dozen to find a free room at reasonable prices. Many small hotels don't put information about available rooms and prices online, so having a bot robocall all of them in an area and build a list of possibilities would be nice.
Google is aggressively pushing OAuth and as a side effect might disable the IMAP interface of Gmail in the future. I guess the point of this feature is more to prevent someone gaining access to your or the recipient's computer in the future from reading sensitive mail, if you don't trust the recipient you shouldn't send them sensitive stuff to begin with.
On the contrary, that's exactly the environment where introducing fake bugs could be useful. Not for misleading attackers, but for testing whether the QA department can find them. I agree that deliberately including bugs in the final product is bad design, but putting them into an internal version to check whether you can find them might give you useful information.
We introduce an all-optical deep learning framework, where the neural network is physically formed by multiple layers of diffractive surfaces that work in collaboration to optically perform an arbitrary function that the network can statistically learn. While the inference/prediction of the physical network is all-optical, the learning part that leads to its design is done through a computer.
Now this is still a really cool tech with a number of potential applications, I don't understand why the authors felt the need to give it such a misleading name.
Nowadays you can embed videos into your site with a single tag and that's a lot more decentralized than relying on a single piece of software that may or may not be developed.
I suspect in this case Google is quite happy to have an excuse not to have an ethics board.
If only there was something Tim Berners-Lee could do about privacy vulnerabilities being included into web standards...
They could use a hybrid system to enable you to fast charge the car with enough juice to get you home.
Unlikely, withdrawing the cash from the wallet would give it away immediately.
That problem only exists because of the artificial scarcity placed on phone calls, which does more harm than good.
The only solid way to prevent abuses like this would be to get rid of DNS entirely. With IPv6 there are enough addresses that there is no reason to ever change the IP of a server, which means links could just use direct IP addresses. Browsers should have quick and easy ways to bookmark an IP with a default name offered by the site itself, and should resolve those bookmarks like it was a domain name when the user types them into the address bar. Users couldn't just type in an address they saw on a billboard but everybody uses QR codes for that already so it wouldn't be a problem.
Succesful doesn't always mean profitable. SpaceX is struggling to stay afloat, and a way to make it more profitable could be to halt new development (and let go of the R&D staff) and start mass producing the design they already have. Always developing new stuff means you have to constantly redesign your production facilities, increasing cost.
But isn't the back button breaking web apps a good argument to allow it to go back to the previous page? Then your web app wouldn't have to worry about it.
Where I live we use these things called a fence. I know it's a strange foreign technology to Americans but it really helps.
There are two reasons tech companies won't move out of the EU. One is the educated workforce, and the other is the data that has to stay on EU soil.
Often Twitter is used as a poor man's RSS, with tweets just being links to the main article.
It's not impossible that the aircraft will be remote controlled by humans, at least at first.
The solution is not less anonymity, but more: if your credit card details are kept secure thiefs can't steal from you, and if you could hide your IP cheaters couldn't DDoS you.
Was patching the game not an option?
The Play store might be a near monopoly now, but if Google asks for too much money I bet it will see some competition as phone manufacturers might decide to just put another app store on the phone.
I'm guessing restaurants are just the first step. I can see this being very useful when trying to find a place to stay. One call wouldn't be a problem, but often I have to make a dozen to find a free room at reasonable prices. Many small hotels don't put information about available rooms and prices online, so having a bot robocall all of them in an area and build a list of possibilities would be nice.
And "indoor".
Only corporate internet. Individuals retain their right of free speech, and hopefully this means that we may return to the days before walled gardens.
Google is aggressively pushing OAuth and as a side effect might disable the IMAP interface of Gmail in the future. I guess the point of this feature is more to prevent someone gaining access to your or the recipient's computer in the future from reading sensitive mail, if you don't trust the recipient you shouldn't send them sensitive stuff to begin with.
More like the young are generally on the losing end of capitalism.
On the contrary, that's exactly the environment where introducing fake bugs could be useful. Not for misleading attackers, but for testing whether the QA department can find them. I agree that deliberately including bugs in the final product is bad design, but putting them into an internal version to check whether you can find them might give you useful information.
If your bank is monetizing your financial data whether Facebook is one of the buyers or not makes little difference.
Yep. From the paper:
Now this is still a really cool tech with a number of potential applications, I don't understand why the authors felt the need to give it such a misleading name.
Nowadays you can embed videos into your site with a single tag and that's a lot more decentralized than relying on a single piece of software that may or may not be developed.
Or data companies share far more of your personal info with each other than they admit.