> The only security difference between signature and PIN is that PIN protects your card from being used by muggers
Absolutely not true. It totally protects my online banking. All banks I know of in the EU provide their customers with what is called an e.dentifier ABN AMRO example here (PDF). Even if my PC gets hacked, they will not be able to access my online banking, because the device requires my card AND my PIN, and generates a login token. This has been in use for many years, and is much more secure than anything I've seen in the US.
A quick Google reveals that around 1 in 5 Californians own guns. Of course not everyone carries it all the time, but there must have been a lot of guns in that room. Why weren't the shooters just killed by people from the audience?
Maybe there weren't enough weapons in the room. So just maybe, the NRA should promote handing out weapons to everyone there, to allow people to defend themselves? Or put some guns on every dinner table. That would scare off all possible shooters!
Ok, I'll explain myself better. Let's turn it around.
It is harmful *not* to expose people to different ideas. If you don't, they will think there is only one 'right' way. This will lead to bad things. What kind? Look at human history.
You are contradicting yourself a bit here. What better way to teach people to think rationally than to show the irrational elements in different ideas?
Just wait until you take your parents in because they're really old, their wearable health monitoring devices running on BLE and/or 802.15.4, and your health care provider requiring an enabled router...
Ok, I look at your series, and I'm thinking: my father would stop after reading the first paragraph. Security, encryption, privacy, they all suffer from people trying to educate the general public on TLAs, hard math, installing utilities.
When will the security community learn that we don't need all those explanations, we need it to just work. We need encryption by default and unless this is available mainstream it's not gonna happen.
Same thing for programmers. Nobody wants to learn about security, and especially about all those encryption algorithms, perfect-forward-secrecy etcetera. It just needs to be default in all frameworks, libraries. I don't care there are so many cyphers, just give me proper defaults.
The problem with security is just that the community around it does a very bad job of making it simple. It needs to disappear into the woodwork guys!
Totally agree. Developers: write software to run on customers' systems, and not on your own desktop. If their distro does not support the packages your software needs, include them in your delivery package.
You won't get very far in the enterprise market if your product doesn't support CentOS/RHEL. Bad for business.
There are too many people here not understanding what is happening here.
What is happening, is that a large community has done a lot of great work creating Wikipedia. The project has needed and attracted a lot of money, which caused an administrative office to be created. This office is now trying to make itself more important, and tries to lead the project into a 'grand future'.
The truth is, they may be well-intentioned, but they are terribly misguided, and incompetent. There are no capable leaders, and.or managers there, they seem to have no understanding of what the project is about, and have spent a lot of money on software projects that failed. They are misguided in that they think they should steer the project, while in fact they should be serving the community.
In short, they are incompetent, and should be replaced. If they aren't, they will kill Wikipedia.
This. Totally agree on this one. When you make context switches (sales/pm asking a 'quick question'), and you continue programming before the full context is restored. That's where bugs happen. That has been my experience in 35 years of coding. No distractions: less bugs. Mod up please.
Score 5, Informative? Come on! How informative is this? Ever tried these steps? They lead you into a maze of options, and hours and hours of netsurfing. Not really helpful. OP was right to ask here.
Let me draw a parallel, and compare the Comcast vs Netflix conflict with your government vs Amazon:
What Comcast has done, is similar to your government checking all delivery trucks at the borders, and if they deliver Amazon goods, hold them for a couple of days while 'checking their papers'. In public statements they claimed: Amazon is so big that they are clogging our border infrastructure, so that's why it takes so long until you get your stuff. They need to pay for all the extra handling at the borders.
This is the heart of the conflict. Netflix' customers just want better service, most of them do not know about Comcast efforts to extort money from Netflix.
The stance of the Net Neutrality people is that this is just an extortion scheme, that tax payers should pay for the roads, and that if government (being a monopolist) is allowed to tax companies like Amazon, (receiving money from both sides), in the end we'll end up with an internet which is not equal for everybody, and in the end the customer will suffer because prices will go up, and service will go down.
I have read Ryan Singel's article. It is NOT "suitable for your neophyte parent, spouse, or sibling." Far too long and too complicated. My father (who is 76 and worked in insurance) would not understand any of it.
I think we all will have a very hard time explaining this to the public
As a Dutch host family with much experience with foreign exchange students, I can attest that full cultural immersion is not only valuable in other ways, but also the best way to learn a foreign language. Internet actually hinders this process to a great extent. Foreign exchange students who stay in close contact to their home families and friends are having the most problems adapting to their new surroundings, and experience feelings of loneliness, estrangedness, and not learning a strange language.
For this reason I recommend as little contact with your home country as possible.
Because in most of the open source development world there are no deadlines and no pay. When you have a deadline, meetings can be great to make sure everyone stays focused and looking in the same direction.
- if you're going hosted use a separate and quality internet connection for your VoIP. - Be wary of NAT. Many problems are caused by NAT routers/firewalls.
Don't say I did not warn you.
I presume you are in the US. Have a look at Intorrent.com for VoIP solutions. I use it. It's asterisk-based, but the GUI is better then anything I've ever seen.
Tell me, why would anyone start to use WebOS? There's Android, there's iOS, Windows. Who needs another one? I predict this project will die a silent death.
What will happen with those broadband mobile units, if there's a crowd of people on the scene, with smartphones? Or there's a disaster and the celltowers go down?
> The only security difference between signature and PIN is that PIN protects your card from being used by muggers
Absolutely not true. It totally protects my online banking. All banks I know of in the EU provide their customers with what is called an e.dentifier ABN AMRO example here (PDF). Even if my PC gets hacked, they will not be able to access my online banking, because the device requires my card AND my PIN, and generates a login token. This has been in use for many years, and is much more secure than anything I've seen in the US.
Relevant username.
A quick Google reveals that around 1 in 5 Californians own guns. Of course not everyone carries it all the time, but there must have been a lot of guns in that room. Why weren't the shooters just killed by people from the audience?
Maybe there weren't enough weapons in the room. So just maybe, the NRA should promote handing out weapons to everyone there, to allow people to defend themselves? Or put some guns on every dinner table. That would scare off all possible shooters!
Ok, I'll explain myself better. Let's turn it around.
It is harmful *not* to expose people to different ideas. If you don't, they will think there is only one 'right' way. This will lead to bad things. What kind? Look at human history.
You are contradicting yourself a bit here. What better way to teach people to think rationally than to show the irrational elements in different ideas?
Just wait until you take your parents in because they're really old, their wearable health monitoring devices running on BLE and/or 802.15.4, and your health care provider requiring an enabled router...
This seems worrying. Care to elaborate?
Coming from Europe, I found Ting a relatively good option for urban areas at least, as they use T-Mobile for GSM/LTE.
Ok, I look at your series, and I'm thinking: my father would stop after reading the first paragraph. Security, encryption, privacy, they all suffer from people trying to educate the general public on TLAs, hard math, installing utilities.
When will the security community learn that we don't need all those explanations, we need it to just work. We need encryption by default and unless this is available mainstream it's not gonna happen.
Same thing for programmers. Nobody wants to learn about security, and especially about all those encryption algorithms, perfect-forward-secrecy etcetera. It just needs to be default in all frameworks, libraries. I don't care there are so many cyphers, just give me proper defaults.
The problem with security is just that the community around it does a very bad job of making it simple. It needs to disappear into the woodwork guys!
Totally agree. Developers: write software to run on customers' systems, and not on your own desktop.
If their distro does not support the packages your software needs, include them in your delivery package.
You won't get very far in the enterprise market if your product doesn't support CentOS/RHEL. Bad for business.
There are too many people here not understanding what is happening here.
What is happening, is that a large community has done a lot of great work creating Wikipedia. The project has needed and attracted a lot of money, which caused an administrative office to be created. This office is now trying to make itself more important, and tries to lead the project into a 'grand future'.
The truth is, they may be well-intentioned, but they are terribly misguided, and incompetent. There are no capable leaders, and.or managers there, they seem to have no understanding of what the project is about, and have spent a lot of money on software projects that failed. They are misguided in that they think they should steer the project, while in fact they should be serving the community.
In short, they are incompetent, and should be replaced. If they aren't, they will kill Wikipedia.
This. Totally agree on this one. When you make context switches (sales/pm asking a 'quick question'), and you continue programming before the full context is restored. That's where bugs happen. That has been my experience in 35 years of coding. No distractions: less bugs. Mod up please.
Score 5, Informative? Come on! How informative is this? Ever tried these steps? They lead you into a maze of options, and hours and hours of netsurfing. Not really helpful. OP was right to ask here.
Let me draw a parallel, and compare the Comcast vs Netflix conflict with your government vs Amazon:
What Comcast has done, is similar to your government checking all delivery trucks at the borders, and if they deliver Amazon goods, hold them for a couple of days while 'checking their papers'. In public statements they claimed: Amazon is so big that they are clogging our border infrastructure, so that's why it takes so long until you get your stuff. They need to pay for all the extra handling at the borders.
This is the heart of the conflict. Netflix' customers just want better service, most of them do not know about Comcast efforts to extort money from Netflix.
The stance of the Net Neutrality people is that this is just an extortion scheme, that tax payers should pay for the roads, and that if government (being a monopolist) is allowed to tax companies like Amazon, (receiving money from both sides), in the end we'll end up with an internet which is not equal for everybody, and in the end the customer will suffer because prices will go up, and service will go down.
I have read Ryan Singel's article. It is NOT "suitable for your neophyte parent, spouse, or sibling."
Far too long and too complicated. My father (who is 76 and worked in insurance) would not understand any of it.
I think we all will have a very hard time explaining this to the public
When I am on the street, I should assume being watched all the time.
When I am in a mall, I am being watched all the time
When I am in the airport, I am being watched all the time
When I am in a stadium, I am being watched all the time
When I am in a store, I must assume I am being watched all the time
When I am online, I should assume being watched all the time.
My iPhone 4 feels a little bit snappier on iOS7. No slowdown even though the hardware is older.
iOS7 runs fine on my iPhone 4. It even feels a little bit faster.
This.
The mediocre intellect is running the world. And we are allowing them.
As a Dutch host family with much experience with foreign exchange students, I can attest that full cultural immersion is not only valuable in other ways, but also the best way to learn a foreign language. Internet actually hinders this process to a great extent. Foreign exchange students who stay in close contact to their home families and friends are having the most problems adapting to their new surroundings, and experience feelings of loneliness, estrangedness, and not learning a strange language.
For this reason I recommend as little contact with your home country as possible.
Because in most of the open source development world there are no deadlines and no pay.
When you have a deadline, meetings can be great to make sure everyone stays focused and
looking in the same direction.
In der Beschränkung zeigt sich der Meister.
My tips for doing VoIP:
- if you're going hosted use a separate and quality internet connection for your VoIP.
- Be wary of NAT. Many problems are caused by NAT routers/firewalls.
Don't say I did not warn you.
I presume you are in the US. Have a look at Intorrent.com for VoIP solutions. I use it. It's asterisk-based, but the GUI is better then anything I've ever seen.
Tell me, why would anyone start to use WebOS? There's Android, there's iOS, Windows. Who needs another one? I predict this project will die a silent death.
What will happen with those broadband mobile units, if there's a crowd of people on the scene, with smartphones?
Or there's a disaster and the celltowers go down?