Lack of warrants. If they had the warrants to do that to these phones, they would've done it. The reason they want easy access is so that they can get arrests made without getting in trouble about breaking the phone. Right now, the phones are just bricks with potential damaging information on a presumably innocent suspect.
Although a well designed security chip won't be easy to break, they self-destruct when attempts are made to get physical access.
What do you think is on these phones that is so important? - The last few numbers you dialed? They could easily get that from the phone provider - The last few locations you were at? Again, the phone provider can give that to you - The last few emails or text messages you sent? Again, providers will cooperate with a legitimate investigation
Criminals that are smart enough will not get caught by anything on their phone regardless of encryption. The only thing that they could want on these phones is in the pursuit of an easy warrant, hence the 4th and 5th amendments.
The definition of broadband speed just got upped last year to 25/4, even though these speeds were to go into effect much earlier due to previous administrations' gradual increases, the Obama administration delayed it unnecessary (well, to give their buddies in telecom a break). Based on the Bush and Clinton administration FCC, we should have 100Mbps as a minimum broadband speed right now (which is what the government enforced donation to your ISP on your internet bill is for: broadband build-outs).
The definition of mobile broadband got upped to 10/1 (from 256k) by the Trump administration which a lot of people are giving him grief for because the mainstream media reporting was making it sound like he downgraded it from 25/4 to 10/1 while the FCC is talking about two different classes of connections (wireless vs wired).
I would agree with a law passing but this motion is to overturn the executive order that modified another executive order.
These politicians want to be able to pass laws that they find convenient at any particular moment by the party in power at any particular time without any due process. Now they want to enshrine this practice by enforcing one executive order and not another.
If they want it so bad, submit it as a law. There's a song about it.
Both Intel ME and AMD's SPS require access to the system to enable in the first place, so yes, you need at the very least an account on the computer. It doesn't require physical access (as in, you don't need to attach wires to the bus or push buttons).
Given that AMD's SPS flaw sits in a certificate validation routine, it may actually be possible to trick the computer into the exploit by using some DRM shenanigans (eg. an evil Netflix site) whereas from what I could compile from a cursory look on the Intel link, you actually already need to have the Intel ME enabled and have some privileges into Intel ME's in order to elevate your permissions.
The Tesla's have better and more double precision cores, larger ECC memory and ECC caches, thermally optimized for having 4 of them in 1U servers vs a single card in a desktop.
The drivers are optimized for different applications. Quadros also tend to be packaged smaller and less noisy or even passive cooled than Geforces.
The Quadro can also virtualize itself so you can have a number of accelerated remote desktops with a single card. Depending on the Quadro line they also have different numbers of single/double precision cores.
Black people being shot by police make up such a small number next to the amount of black people killed by other black people that it's laughable this is even a thing.
Police make mistakes and shoot more white people than they do black people. Compared to the crime statistics, white people are 2 times more likely to get shot for committing a crime than black people.
Google, Amazon etc already have open source hardware for anything from storage to compute nodes (a lot of it is still ARM, Broadcom and Intel chips but everything around it is custom)
It's not cheap for a single system nor very well understood by the regular sysadmin to put the system together, hence you don't see them unless you buy them in datacenter-bulk, I have pondered them for a Ceph buildout because at scales of petabytes they start making financial sense.
I imagine that open source hardware has the same problem. Until you reach a certain scale it won't be cheap and thus it won't reach the majority of the market.
I would read it more as being dismissive of North Korea.
You have to think about what it does to ones ego when after threatening someone with some martial art moves, they just pull up their jacket to show a Magnum and dismissively say "come on", turn their back and continue what they're doing.
I think Trump isn't smart, probably on the level of Bush Jr. but he knows how to get into peoples head, whether it's getting them into investing, going to his hotels, buying his steaks; he likes to impress people with size and grandeur which is mostly just marketing and for the vast majority, it works. He's a marketing savant and he can sell anything, even making him a president.
That was a single chip in 1995, we now have orders of magnitude more chips produced per year. Even if Intel did decide to give out unaffected models, it would take ~3 years to set up the lines and ~2 years at peak production to replace just half of them.
Fascism is on the right, Nazism was different. Fascism isn't always bad, you could call Linus a fascist within the Linux project.
The socialist ideology is what got Hitler to power by making it a nationalist movement. He was all about the expansion of government, free healthcare, regulated jobs, minimum wages but then framed it within the context of military conquest at the expense of minorities.
Already the case, French Law has an engrained 3 day media blackout before elections and they did pressure Facebook and large news sites successfully in complying when Macron's faux-pas came out. They do go so far as to threaten people in France with prosecution for sharing news articles about Macrons corruption.
It's also one of the many reasons Macron got his narrow win, media blackouts hindered "inconvenient facts" from reaching the public.
There are obviously sources outside of France, hence why Macron wants to block them, but if you're a Frenchie on Facebook saying stuff during election season, you could go to jail.
It's interesting for pure mathematics people. There are some minor applications for this although it's mostly theoretical.
Once we get bigger computers that can hold these numbers, they may be used to prime a PRNG or a cryptographic constant, especially once quantum computing starts threatening the constants in the lower ranges. Quantum computers can't break cryptography, they just do it faster and for larger primes you still need more q-bits.
Highly theoretical there may be some constant to the prime numbers. If there is some rhyme or reason to prime numbers, we may be able to predict where the next one may be or how to derive its factors. This is one of the holy grails of mathematics and could also impact cryptography.
Pretty much any American-made or Japanese cheap-car. Jeep, Pontiac, GM, Buick, Chevrolet, Hyundai - I've driven them all, given they were the cheapest of the cheap, most of them cost $1200 or less when I purchased them.
You're comparing a very expensive high end vehicle to a cheap daily commute car. These cars cost $12-15k when you buy them brand new, not $60-80k, after about 10-15 years of driving in high heat, rain, several inches of snow and salt, up and down hills, this month it's the shocks, then it's the wheel bearings, then the tailpipe develops a hole and you get a fix-it ticket, then after about 150k miles the gearbox starts to slip and suddenly it won't start because the computer has fried.
The engine will keep running, I can tell you that about American cars, but the entire thing around it will corrode and in 20 years you have cars that are just drivetrain-on-frame. Especially those Ford F-whatever, there are plenty around here that drive around with golfball sized holes in their cabins or half the rear bed is corroded away. For most Japanese cars it's the other way around, the engine in a Hyundai or Subaru will overheat going up a hill in winter (what do you expect from a 0.8L engine) or the tiny little brakes will overheat in the summer going downhill.
My Volkswagen does seem to be doing better ~10years old now and runs like new, it was a more expensive car though, I bought it for $15k at 2 years old but it was $45k MSRP, getting to have a squeaky belt but regular maintenance keeps it healthy.
If Amazon just spoofed its user agent, it wouldnâ(TM)t have such trouble. The Fire is just an Android system, there are plenty of YouTube apps for Android.
These cars are expensive. Leases are cheaper on a monthly base than a 3-5 year payment plan.
On the other hand the entire market is filled with wealthier individuals, people in those brackets lease for tax purposes as well as the need to have a reliable vehicle. If you can afford (time-wise) to fix your car every other month, then it makes sense to keep your car 10-15 years, myself I am having more and more time-sensitive meetings so I canâ(TM)t afford not to get somewhere because my car broke down again, I might consider leasing once my current car is starting to wear out.
As any seasoned Unix sysadmin knows: it's called single user mode. It avoids SIP, Gatekeeper and pretty much all kernel extensions. You can then kextunload or simply delete the file and (optionally) rebuild the kernel cache.
Lack of warrants. If they had the warrants to do that to these phones, they would've done it. The reason they want easy access is so that they can get arrests made without getting in trouble about breaking the phone. Right now, the phones are just bricks with potential damaging information on a presumably innocent suspect.
Although a well designed security chip won't be easy to break, they self-destruct when attempts are made to get physical access.
What do you think is on these phones that is so important?
- The last few numbers you dialed? They could easily get that from the phone provider
- The last few locations you were at? Again, the phone provider can give that to you
- The last few emails or text messages you sent? Again, providers will cooperate with a legitimate investigation
Criminals that are smart enough will not get caught by anything on their phone regardless of encryption. The only thing that they could want on these phones is in the pursuit of an easy warrant, hence the 4th and 5th amendments.
Nope, what GP said is factually incorrect.
The definition of broadband speed just got upped last year to 25/4, even though these speeds were to go into effect much earlier due to previous administrations' gradual increases, the Obama administration delayed it unnecessary (well, to give their buddies in telecom a break). Based on the Bush and Clinton administration FCC, we should have 100Mbps as a minimum broadband speed right now (which is what the government enforced donation to your ISP on your internet bill is for: broadband build-outs).
The definition of mobile broadband got upped to 10/1 (from 256k) by the Trump administration which a lot of people are giving him grief for because the mainstream media reporting was making it sound like he downgraded it from 25/4 to 10/1 while the FCC is talking about two different classes of connections (wireless vs wired).
Nope, they just changed it to 25/3 up from 4/1 during the Obama administration.
I would agree with a law passing but this motion is to overturn the executive order that modified another executive order.
These politicians want to be able to pass laws that they find convenient at any particular moment by the party in power at any particular time without any due process. Now they want to enshrine this practice by enforcing one executive order and not another.
If they want it so bad, submit it as a law. There's a song about it.
Both Intel ME and AMD's SPS require access to the system to enable in the first place, so yes, you need at the very least an account on the computer. It doesn't require physical access (as in, you don't need to attach wires to the bus or push buttons).
Given that AMD's SPS flaw sits in a certificate validation routine, it may actually be possible to trick the computer into the exploit by using some DRM shenanigans (eg. an evil Netflix site) whereas from what I could compile from a cursory look on the Intel link, you actually already need to have the Intel ME enabled and have some privileges into Intel ME's in order to elevate your permissions.
The US also has cheap pay as you go providers, you just have to find them.
There are glassware agreements for bars and try off-roading your hatchback and get warranties honored.
The Tesla's have better and more double precision cores, larger ECC memory and ECC caches, thermally optimized for having 4 of them in 1U servers vs a single card in a desktop.
The drivers are optimized for different applications. Quadros also tend to be packaged smaller and less noisy or even passive cooled than Geforces.
The Quadro can also virtualize itself so you can have a number of accelerated remote desktops with a single card. Depending on the Quadro line they also have different numbers of single/double precision cores.
Black people being shot by police make up such a small number next to the amount of black people killed by other black people that it's laughable this is even a thing.
Police make mistakes and shoot more white people than they do black people. Compared to the crime statistics, white people are 2 times more likely to get shot for committing a crime than black people.
Google, Amazon etc already have open source hardware for anything from storage to compute nodes (a lot of it is still ARM, Broadcom and Intel chips but everything around it is custom)
It's not cheap for a single system nor very well understood by the regular sysadmin to put the system together, hence you don't see them unless you buy them in datacenter-bulk, I have pondered them for a Ceph buildout because at scales of petabytes they start making financial sense.
I imagine that open source hardware has the same problem. Until you reach a certain scale it won't be cheap and thus it won't reach the majority of the market.
I would read it more as being dismissive of North Korea.
You have to think about what it does to ones ego when after threatening someone with some martial art moves, they just pull up their jacket to show a Magnum and dismissively say "come on", turn their back and continue what they're doing.
I think Trump isn't smart, probably on the level of Bush Jr. but he knows how to get into peoples head, whether it's getting them into investing, going to his hotels, buying his steaks; he likes to impress people with size and grandeur which is mostly just marketing and for the vast majority, it works. He's a marketing savant and he can sell anything, even making him a president.
That was a single chip in 1995, we now have orders of magnitude more chips produced per year. Even if Intel did decide to give out unaffected models, it would take ~3 years to set up the lines and ~2 years at peak production to replace just half of them.
Intels updates (microcode) doesn't run on AMD. Intel doesn't issue patches for OS.
Fascism is on the right, Nazism was different. Fascism isn't always bad, you could call Linus a fascist within the Linux project.
The socialist ideology is what got Hitler to power by making it a nationalist movement. He was all about the expansion of government, free healthcare, regulated jobs, minimum wages but then framed it within the context of military conquest at the expense of minorities.
Already the case, French Law has an engrained 3 day media blackout before elections and they did pressure Facebook and large news sites successfully in complying when Macron's faux-pas came out. They do go so far as to threaten people in France with prosecution for sharing news articles about Macrons corruption.
At least both parties have their news source, not for nothing people call it the Clinton News Network.
It's also one of the many reasons Macron got his narrow win, media blackouts hindered "inconvenient facts" from reaching the public.
There are obviously sources outside of France, hence why Macron wants to block them, but if you're a Frenchie on Facebook saying stuff during election season, you could go to jail.
It's interesting for pure mathematics people. There are some minor applications for this although it's mostly theoretical.
Once we get bigger computers that can hold these numbers, they may be used to prime a PRNG or a cryptographic constant, especially once quantum computing starts threatening the constants in the lower ranges. Quantum computers can't break cryptography, they just do it faster and for larger primes you still need more q-bits.
Highly theoretical there may be some constant to the prime numbers. If there is some rhyme or reason to prime numbers, we may be able to predict where the next one may be or how to derive its factors. This is one of the holy grails of mathematics and could also impact cryptography.
Pretty much any American-made or Japanese cheap-car. Jeep, Pontiac, GM, Buick, Chevrolet, Hyundai - I've driven them all, given they were the cheapest of the cheap, most of them cost $1200 or less when I purchased them.
You're comparing a very expensive high end vehicle to a cheap daily commute car. These cars cost $12-15k when you buy them brand new, not $60-80k, after about 10-15 years of driving in high heat, rain, several inches of snow and salt, up and down hills, this month it's the shocks, then it's the wheel bearings, then the tailpipe develops a hole and you get a fix-it ticket, then after about 150k miles the gearbox starts to slip and suddenly it won't start because the computer has fried.
The engine will keep running, I can tell you that about American cars, but the entire thing around it will corrode and in 20 years you have cars that are just drivetrain-on-frame. Especially those Ford F-whatever, there are plenty around here that drive around with golfball sized holes in their cabins or half the rear bed is corroded away. For most Japanese cars it's the other way around, the engine in a Hyundai or Subaru will overheat going up a hill in winter (what do you expect from a 0.8L engine) or the tiny little brakes will overheat in the summer going downhill.
My Volkswagen does seem to be doing better ~10years old now and runs like new, it was a more expensive car though, I bought it for $15k at 2 years old but it was $45k MSRP, getting to have a squeaky belt but regular maintenance keeps it healthy.
If Amazon just spoofed its user agent, it wouldnâ(TM)t have such trouble. The Fire is just an Android system, there are plenty of YouTube apps for Android.
These cars are expensive. Leases are cheaper on a monthly base than a 3-5 year payment plan.
On the other hand the entire market is filled with wealthier individuals, people in those brackets lease for tax purposes as well as the need to have a reliable vehicle. If you can afford (time-wise) to fix your car every other month, then it makes sense to keep your car 10-15 years, myself I am having more and more time-sensitive meetings so I canâ(TM)t afford not to get somewhere because my car broke down again, I might consider leasing once my current car is starting to wear out.
You'll now be running 1200-1600 servers depending on your workload.
As any seasoned Unix sysadmin knows: it's called single user mode. It avoids SIP, Gatekeeper and pretty much all kernel extensions. You can then kextunload or simply delete the file and (optionally) rebuild the kernel cache.