disruptiveink
No user record in our sample, but disruptiveink has activity below (stories or comments). Likely we have partial data — the full bulk-load will fill profiles in.
No user record in our sample, but disruptiveink has activity below (stories or comments). Likely we have partial data — the full bulk-load will fill profiles in.
This is stupid/dangerous advice and I will die on this hill. > The JWT specification is specifically designed only for very short-live tokens (~5 minute or less). Sessions need to have longer lifespans than that. Your…
Killed for Skype, which was already declining by that time. Microsoft was keen on unifying their IM platforms, but failed to realise that unless the migration path is incredibly smooth, people just won't do it. And the…
Can't we just normalise publishing whatever you put into the LLM instead? I'm sure the author typed things into their favourite AI assistant that regurgitated that long form, LLM-speak style version. I'm sure the…
You're thinking of this like a game where the only point is to "win". That's not how this would actually work in practice. Blue is the only moral and logical choice. If red gets over 50% and you picked it, therefore…
Correct. If you can always either fix it forwards or roll back, which you should be able to unless you're building software that needs to go out in releases with versions tracked separately that need to keep getting…
Baseline requirements are not an imaginary problem. All of them have a legitimate reason for existing. You could argue that some "are not that big of a deal", but that's exactly the point, the overbearing and overly…
If you purposely go into your phone settings and turn off auto-capitalization (which is what the kids do, since they're all typing on their phones), isn't it the very definition of pretentiousness? You're going into…
Cat's out of the bag there already. We all have general purpose computing devices in our pockets, locked down on purpose. Android used to allow you to gain admin rights but it's been getting more and more impossible to…
Correct. Age verification and privacy consents belong on the browser. The issue is that on the browser, things work a bit too well (remember https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P3P ?), so the big players are incentivized to…
The insane question here is, why would the EU mandate hardware attestation controlled by two private American companies in order to access services? That seems completely contrary to the spirit of EU laws and…
Agreed. I refuse to use the terms "rooting" and "jailbreaking" in professional environments, I always use terms like "admin access to the mobile device". Because that's what it is, despite the extremely successful…
Starmer is as authoritarian as the Tories at this point. There is no difference here.
We have a near perfect system for finding the location of phone thieves, yet the police will not go and knock on the doors of criminals even when explicitly shown proof of "this is where the thief is currently".
I'm not victim blaming here, but does anyone have this nagging feeling that in this case, we, the "techies" caused this by refusing to engage with lawmakers? In the case of E2E encryption, it's definitely a hill to die…
Usually I would agree with you, but this is an incredibly common initialism, used by not just people in the industry, but also by consumers. Sure, it may not be as widespread as VHS (global) or API (tech-adjacent), but…
I really don't, what is the answer? I assume higher ups at law enforcement, who are detached from the day-to-day operations, make up excuses about "end to end encryption being a challenge" because it's a meme, much like…
I don't understand why they keep trying this over and over. It can't possibly be a moral crusade as it keeps happening with different players, but I don't understand the purpose. We now live in a world where the…
It was Bill fucking Atkinson. Not a disposable random contractor you hire by the dozen when you need to build more CRUD APIs. At that time at Apple, even as an IC, Bill had lines of communication to Steve and was…
Wait, but didn't TLS 1.0 have significant improvements over SSL 3.0? The article makes it seems that just a couple of things were tweaked just to make it different for the sake of being different.
Ah, yes, The color of infinity, inside an empty glass.
Google ultimately did that for China. The outcome in that case is that the domestic market filled in the gaps, while complying to all relevant authoritarian legislation. I do not believe that the same would happen for…
Amusing nomenclature, but it's a legitimate concern. If your SREs use application credentials to connect to the database, your ability to have effective access controls and have accurate access audit trails are severely…
The value proposition of Crowdstrike is exactly that: something that you can deploy to tick the regulatory checkbox of "we have endpoint protection from a reputable company everywhere" without consuming outrageous…
What do you mean? They wrote the kernel driver. With great power comes great responsability. If you're writing a kernel driver that is deployed throughout a great portion of Fortune 500, with the money that that…
You are correct. Steve definitely believed in doing things properly because you know they're there, regardless of who can see it: https://folklore.org/Signing_Party.html > Steve came up with the awesome idea of having…