All countries with an average household income that allows for Teslas or similar cars have very stable electricity networks that can easily cope with the slowly raising demand from EV. Except from the US, maybe.
If this happens we'll have to make sure to completely remove PepsiCo from all universities (not only those with faculties of astronomy), all colleges and all highschools and schools.
There is no way to "mathematically prove" security of software on the confidence-level of a mathematical poof.
This - on the code level - is exactly what you learned to do at university when learning functional programming languages. Yes, there’s still a lot that that can go wrong on deeper layers‘ but at least for their code they proved correctness.
Maybe learning a single functional language like ML to grasp the concept and a little mathematics should be mandatory for every software developer. At least many of the comments suggest this to me.
IIRC I’ve seen passwords in transcripts of HTTP authentication logged into a big retailers Splunk. It was fixed days after mentioning it. I guess this was similar with Elsevier‘s Kibana, with the addition of no “user accounts” and “publicly accessible”
No secret information is transferred over any network without adding additional layers of encryption. NOBODY in their right mind trusts the encryption of the underlying network infrastructure, especially secret services.
So this is clearly an attempt to bully Germany into taking part in Trumps trade wars.
I nearly never get robocalls in Germany, none of my friends watching LWT does. I guess we're using a completely different phone network or technology in Europe.
That must be why universal healthcare works here, too, and cant work in the US:-)
The (excellent) Marshall Plan that built Western Europe to be a fortress of success against the USSR. Western Germany received $1.3 bn and UK received $2.8 bn - the most of it. What was your point, again?
This is really frightening - I've been riding motorcycles in Germany all year for 20 years, naturally taking the more scenic routes. In summer I used to clean my helmet from insects at most tankstops because of visibility. That was kind of a ceremony - tank, take a paper, soak it, put it on the helmet, go pay, come back.
This year I cleaned it at home every few weeks. Something changed, for whatever reason and the sheer number or weight of biomass that seems to have disappeared is frightning.
> I heard a story where a company was audited for license compliance.
I was tangentially involved in an Oracle license audit at a telco a few years ago. Everybody hated Oracle afterwards for their slimy business practices, even if we personally didn't have to pay for it.
>And you probably spend countless man hours trying to get Postgresql to perform the same way Oracle does.
Why the heck would you want that? That makes as much sense as trying to get eg. Python perform the same way as Cobol does. Oracle and Cobol had their time and now they are just a legacy - nobody wants them but they are difficult to get rid off.
I have seen many ancient or old applications in financial business and telcos that still use oracle databases somewhere but the proposed big updates that are planned decidedly don't anymore. Everything Oracle is legacy software that is often deeply ingrained into the companys infrastructure and part of the expensive bugs that will be fixed "real soon now". I think Oracle can still survive on this like a tick in a companys side, but most plans for the future that have been made are getting rid of Oracle. Nobody likes Oracle, even IBM/DB2 seems to have a better reputation.
Thank you for pointing this out, again. I'm sure a 4 digit code smeared on the display is a lot safer.
That is the alternative security measure for most people and thus most phones.
Biometrics that are hard to spoof within the 4 tries an adverary has before the device falls back to a 6+ character alphanumeric code are just brilliant and way more secure in real life.
So will there now be special versions of self-encrypting SSD for sale in Australia? Will apple / ms have a special branch of iOS / windows with weakened encryption? Or will there be backdoors in everything for everyone now, even in the less stupid countries? Can an Australian be a kernel maintainer? Is there any job where an Australian software developer is not toxic now?
if they have any. If that law passes we know that any encrypted transaction in Australian software is backdoored, as is every TLS encrypted connection to eg. a bank.
All countries with an average household income that allows for Teslas or similar cars have very stable electricity networks that can easily cope with the slowly raising demand from EV.
Except from the US, maybe.
If this happens we'll have to make sure to completely remove PepsiCo from all universities (not only those with faculties of astronomy), all colleges and all highschools and schools.
This thread must be the one with the most comments moderated informative / insightful in the history of slashdot.
There is no way to "mathematically prove" security of software on the confidence-level of a mathematical poof.
This - on the code level - is exactly what you learned to do at university when learning functional programming languages.
Yes, there’s still a lot that that can go wrong on deeper layers‘ but at least for their code they proved correctness.
Maybe learning a single functional language like ML to grasp the concept and a little mathematics should be mandatory for every software developer.
At least many of the comments suggest this to me.
[ ] you understood G”oels incompleteness theorem
IIRC I’ve seen passwords in transcripts of HTTP authentication logged into a big retailers Splunk. It was fixed days after mentioning it.
I guess this was similar with Elsevier‘s Kibana, with the addition of no “user accounts” and “publicly accessible”
I prefer the password management of sci-hub,
No secret information is transferred over any network without adding additional layers of encryption. NOBODY in their right mind trusts the encryption of the underlying network infrastructure, especially secret services.
So this is clearly an attempt to bully Germany into taking part in Trumps trade wars.
I nearly never get robocalls in Germany, none of my friends watching LWT does.
I guess we're using a completely different phone network or technology in Europe.
That must be why universal healthcare works here, too, and cant work in the US :-)
The (excellent) Marshall Plan that built Western Europe to be a fortress of success against the USSR.
Western Germany received $1.3 bn and UK received $2.8 bn - the most of it.
What was your point, again?
it currently more like âzPerson receiving leg transplant after stepping on landmine was cured of athletes foot !!!âoe
Why do you write this as an anonymous coward?
This is the first coherent, non tinfoil hat comment I read on it.
This is really frightening - I've been riding motorcycles in Germany all year for 20 years, naturally taking the more scenic routes.
In summer I used to clean my helmet from insects at most tankstops because of visibility. That was kind of a ceremony - tank, take a paper, soak it, put it on the helmet, go pay, come back.
This year I cleaned it at home every few weeks.
Something changed, for whatever reason and the sheer number or weight of biomass that seems to have disappeared is frightning.
home of the stupid bullies.
Trump as a President fits perfectly.
> I heard a story where a company was audited for license compliance.
I was tangentially involved in an Oracle license audit at a telco a few years ago. Everybody hated Oracle afterwards for their slimy business practices, even if we personally didn't have to pay for it.
>And you probably spend countless man hours trying to get Postgresql to perform the same way Oracle does.
Why the heck would you want that? That makes as much sense as trying to get eg. Python perform the same way as Cobol does.
Oracle and Cobol had their time and now they are just a legacy - nobody wants them but they are difficult to get rid off.
I have seen many ancient or old applications in financial business and telcos that still use oracle databases somewhere but the proposed big updates that are planned decidedly don't anymore.
Everything Oracle is legacy software that is often deeply ingrained into the companys infrastructure and part of the expensive bugs that will be fixed "real soon now".
I think Oracle can still survive on this like a tick in a companys side, but most plans for the future that have been made are getting rid of Oracle.
Nobody likes Oracle, even IBM/DB2 seems to have a better reputation.
This story fits the general sentiment of your footer too well, so I call bullshit on you until you provide proper source.
Thank you for pointing this out, again.
I'm sure a 4 digit code smeared on the display is a lot safer.
That is the alternative security measure for most people and thus most phones.
Biometrics that are hard to spoof within the 4 tries an adverary has before the device falls back to a 6+ character alphanumeric code are just brilliant and way more secure in real life.
So will there now be special versions of self-encrypting SSD for sale in Australia? Will apple / ms have a special branch of iOS / windows with weakened encryption?
Or will there be backdoors in everything for everyone now, even in the less stupid countries?
Can an Australian be a kernel maintainer?
Is there any job where an Australian software developer is not toxic now?
All TLS connections will have to terminate at the great firewall of OZ now.
I'm looking forward to Apple turning off iMessage in Australia to make a point.
if they have any. If that law passes we know that any encrypted transaction in Australian software is backdoored, as is every TLS encrypted connection to eg. a bank.
> faggot
Your homophobia surely validates your point.
Republicans are to âsconservativeâ as people fondling kids are to âsfiends of childrenâ .