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User: Cigaes

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Comments · 79

  1. Re:HTTPS is not the only encryption on The Internet of Compromised Things · · Score: 1

    TLS is the name for later evolutions of the SSL protocol, but as someone else already noted, I was talking about SSH, not SSL.

  2. HTTPS is not the only encryption on The Internet of Compromised Things · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The first thing I notice about that article is that it help spreading the misconception that HTTP is the only use of Internet and HTTPS the only encryption scheme. I must say, I feel much safer knowing my SSH sessions are not HTTPS-encrypted, because the certification mechanism is completely broken.

  3. Re:not the only coutry on North Korea Is Switching To a New Time Zone · · Score: 1

    What you say is certainly true, but it does not cancel the fact that the shifted time zone is more suited to the lifestyle of the country, and that is what matters, not any kind of “should” based on geography. After all, having 24 hours is completely arbitrary, and starting the numbering on the “middle” of the night is too. Personally, I number my hours from ~6 to ~28; I have heard that this is common practice in Japan, for example in TV magazines. Having the wrap-around at a time where almost everybody sleeps is more convenient; for the same reason I consider that New Year should be the first of August.

  4. Re:not the only coutry on North Korea Is Switching To a New Time Zone · · Score: 3, Interesting

    France is in the same time zone as most of Europe, from Spain (9.3W-3.3E) to Macedonia (20.5E-23.0E). Why should it want to be on the same time zone as the UK, which nowadays is part of America? The French lifestyle is already shifted towards late hours: summertime UTC+2 makes the daytime better matched to it, and would do so even in winter. UTC+3 would probably be even better, in fact.

  5. Not the right tool on AMD Forces a LibreOffice Speed Boost With GPU Acceleration · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I wonder if a spreadsheet is really the right tool for computations that take several dozens of seconds on modern hardware, even without GPU acceleration. I am inclined to think it is not.

  6. The real question is: is there asbestos in their router?

  7. Hushlands on Librarians As the First Line of Privacy Defense · · Score: 1

    The Librarians already control the Hushlands. Sleep well.

  8. Bias on Reason: How To Break the Internet (in a Bad Way) · · Score: 1

    Whenever I read “John Nobody claims that Net Neutrality is the root of all evil”, I try to find out who John Nobody is. Usually, I find out he is a corporate-style person with absolutely no clue about how the Internet works. Do I dare generalize? After all, all economists are convinced that with enough investment when energy will become too expensive, companies will be able to overcome the first and second principles of thermodynamics. Nothing new under the sun.

  9. A browser for the power luser on Hands-On With the Vivaldi Browser · · Score: 0

    A browser for the “power user”? Cool, let us give it a try. Now, what is the Git clone URL? Hum. Source tarball? No? Seriously? Just a bad joke then.

  10. Hinamizawa syndrome on Scientists Discover a Virus That Changes the Brain To "Make Humans More Stupid" · · Score: 1

    Is this a sign that the Hinamizawa syndrome can actually exist?

  11. Re:Blatant ignorance on Wi-Fi Illness Claim Doesn't Impress New Mexico Court · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    X-rays are harmless if they are used at low power, and harmful if they are used at high power. Same goes for UV and gamma rays, only with different threshold.

    Therefore, the original claim, “no scientific study has yet proved that electromagnetic stimulus adversely impacts personal health”, is obviously completely wrong: we know that some electromagnetic stimulus are harmful.

    I plead guilty on the Mexico/New Mexico thing. For the rest, some people should re-learn basic logic and look-up “sarcasm” in a dictionary.

  12. Blatant ignorance on Wi-Fi Illness Claim Doesn't Impress New Mexico Court · · Score: 0, Troll

    “no scientific study has yet proved that electromagnetic stimulus adversely impacts personal health” Are we to assume that it is ok, in Mexico, to sunbath without sunscreen? Are X-rays and gamma rays also harmless there?

  13. Re:Yes, sadly, it is too much. on German Government Wants Google To Pay For the Right To Link To News Sites · · Score: 1

    I am sure the German lawmakers know all about the workings of a search engine. And if they do not, they can ask advice to their French neighbours: I am sure they would be thrilled to explain how to use the OpenOffice firewall to prevent Google from indexing news sites.

  14. Patents are not property on German Court Upholds Ban On Push Email In Apple's iCloud, MobileMe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Please refrain from using words as “thief” when writing about patents. Patents are a temporary monopoly awarded in exchange for publication of an idea. They have nothing to do with property. An idea can not be stolen. Using that kind of vocabulary only makes the patents and copyright's advocates' game.

    On the other hand, you are perfectly right to underline that these kind of patents are ludicrous.

  15. Mixed feelings on German Court Upholds Ban On Push Email In Apple's iCloud, MobileMe · · Score: 1

    On one hand, people who sold their freedom for a few more blinking lights got exactly what they deserved. This is, at some level, deeply satisfying. The same went on, for example, when VLC had to be removed from the apple application store due to GPL incompatibility (and do not forgot that GPL is not just a license, it is a weapon against proprietary software and closed platforms: it was doing exactly what it was designed to do).

    On the other hand, a court of justice upholding a trivial software patent is not a good news at all.

    In this particular case, I am afraid that the second consideration is overwhelmingly more serious than the first.

  16. Re:Three years ago... on Apple's Lossless Audio Codec (ALAC) Now Open Source · · Score: 1

    ... And now that I think about it, that makes sense. Three years...

    I think they spent the first year trying to determine if they could sue FFmpeg.

    Then they spent the second year trying to determine if they could change the codec to make it stop working in FFmpeg.

    And they spent the last year while techies tried to convince marketing and legal people that since their code was now worthless, they could release it and take what little publicity they still could.

  17. Three years ago... on Apple's Lossless Audio Codec (ALAC) Now Open Source · · Score: 1

    FFmpeg has had support for ALAC, both encoding and decoding, thanks to a GSoC student, for more than three years. Just saying...

  18. Technic / marketing on Your Tech Skills Have a Two Year Half-Life · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "a techie's skill set from a marketability perspective has a two year half-life"

    Well, a marketie's skill set from a technical perspective has a zero year half-life.

  19. They can not be forced to disclose the source code on Hamstersoft Ebook App Rips Off GPL3 Code, Say Calibre Devs · · Score: 2

    They can not be forced to disclose the source code. This is a common misconception about the GPL.

    If a GPL violation goes to court, the judge can order the infringing party to stop the distribution and pay damages to the copyright owner, but he will not order the disclosure of the source code. The disclosure of the source code is only a gesture that most FOSS developers will accept to drop the charges.

    Of course, if the software is only a thin layer of sugar around a core of GPL code, stopping the distribution means closing the business.

    On the other hand, the situation can be reverted: the GPL code may be just a small, non-essential part of the software. Think readline, for example: a software is more comfortable with line editing, but it is in no way necessary. In such situation, the violator may decide to pay the damages and remove the GPLed code from its software, to keep in business with its proprietary model.

  20. FFmpeg's AAC encoder is not finished on Public AAC Listening Test @ ~96 Kbps [July 2011]. · · Score: 4, Informative

    FFmpeg's AAC encoder is not finished (yet?), and flagged as experimental. Including it in such a test is rather a dubious idea: it is likely to give a bad impression of the whole project.

    Having the new vo-aacenc as contender for the Free Software community would IMHO have been more relevant.

  21. I tend to agree on Microsoft Brands WebGL a 'Harmful' Technology · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Considering that most accelerated 3D drivers for video controllers are utter crap full security flaws, or “optimizations“, as some call them, and that a video controller has full access to the system bus, and therefore to the RAM, drives, etc., I tend to agree that letting anyone on the web transparently send possibly crafted data to the 3D driver is, from a security point of view, a rather dubious idea.

  22. Re:Implementation issues on Sweden May Mandate Opt-in For Cookie Transfer · · Score: 3

    It can't. But it can remember people who opted in for cookies with a cookie.

    In fact, they really thought it trough.

  23. Re:So... on RockMelt: Google Chrome, Only Better · · Score: 1

    I concur. When I read the title of this article, I thought that maybe it was a fork of Chromium that dropped the idiotic policy "we know better than the user what he wants" and restored such useful functions as find-links-as-you-type, middle-click URL paste, open frame in new tab, GUI style customization and so on.

    1: I know, there is an extension; but it works badly.

  24. The GPL is not just an open source license on Open Source Licensing and the App Store Model · · Score: 1

    I completely second this.

    What people forget here is that the GPL is not just an open source license, not even just the most popular open source license. It has specifically been conceived as a “weapon” to wage “war” against proprietary software. That is the whole point of the “copyleft” idea: give Free software an advantage it does not normally have by locking out proprietary editors.

    Closed embedded devices is now mostly the realm of proprietary software. If their users are denied the benefit of all the GPL software around, maybe they will migrate to a less closed platform.

    The changes from GPLv2 to GPLv3 already went in that direction, but they rather focused on software that was embedded in hardware without possibility of control, not individual applications that can be installed separately on a closed and locked-down operating system. I would not be surprised if we heard soon about a future GPLv4 that focuses specifically on that.

  25. Zahir Effect on When Computers Go Wrong · · Score: 1

    Amusing Zahir effect: just today, Userfriendly republished the "metric to standard calculator: $15, telescope: $270, mars lander: $135 million, the look on the scientists' faces: pricess" strip.