There are update logs of the train software. Because of them it is known that workers of the company literally snuck into waiting trains and updated the software without the owners knowing. So really, but far from that.
This is a reason why it was detected a year later - the train service was delayed and it spent late November and whole December in service. So the "expiration" intended for 2021 only manifested in 2022.
Very charitable. The "expiry date" was set to the next servicing date and there was no way for competition to fix this hardcoded date and this was not documented in the official documents. Clearly a way to force buyers…
It is also investigated by the Agency of Internal Security and I really doubt they don't have huge problems out of this. This is taken extremely seriously internally. There's a ton of evidence to prove what happened and…
Ironically this one may actually be better represented by a for loop, because after 20 times or so you might want to reconsider your situation.
You already face the same threat then. Many, if not most, nontrivial programs have at least one way to escalate to arbitrary code execution from config. For example sway has exec, basically any useful editor has "on…
It's also a saying I'm Polish, and I also didn't realize it's not in English.
But this is what hobbyist developers care about, which is what ultimately matters.
Can you link to some study that confirms it? This sounds far too simplistic to be true, especially for something as complex and unpredictable as the economy.
Saying it's an urban legend implies it's false, but that's a bit nitpicky IMO. Most people can read most such "scrambled" sentences without a lot of effort, so that part is certainly true (and non-obvious). The original…
As someone who watched all the "original" marvel movies, up to a infinity war I think, I don't think anyone expected any depth from them . I wanted to watch a classical sorry full of non-subverted tropes about a hero…
What about "Gimp generated imagery" for computer graphic, and "brush generated imagery" for oil paintings?
[flagged]
As a pedestrian and car hater I don't mind that too much. Pedestrians always have priority on the walk signal, and there is a special separate light to allow/disallow cars to turn. In practice they are used where it's…
I don't want to halt AI training, I want corporations to fuck off from using my (A)GPL code to train their proprietary models which they then sell to people writing more proprietary code. I would be ok if the derived…
One: anonymous[1] method of payment online. Maybe this is not a problem you like, but your statement is trivially false. [1] pseudonymous (in case of BTC) if we're being pedantic.
>slightly handicapping people who become accustomed to it and then read text without it. Or maybe slightly boosting when reading double spaced? (I didn't read the article yet, my plane is just starting).
>pooperings Just a side note, but it's hard to take you seriously when you resort to such childish name calling. I think your chance of convicting traders (me included) would be much higher if you used some technical…
Can you share some examples of the outdated information and the lack of understanding by the authors, so we may all learn? From a quick skim I noticed the article mentions CopperheadOS, even though it was renamed to…
>The idea is that the secret key material is never compromised as it is assumed in all security cases. That's not true, we have (perfect) forward secrecy, backwards secrecy and key rotation mechanisms because we often…
Even with n=1 you can get something useful. IIRC "on average" if you have ID x than the best population estimation is 2*x. Of course the error margin is immense, but it's still better than nothing.
It's good to consider this but... Plenty of sites expose user ID as a regular integer. In some cases you might want to avoid this (leaking user count to competitors etc), but I have never heard about anyone calling this…
Same in Poland. It's both a generic term ("Metro w Londynie" == London Underground) and a name for a specific system (Metro in Warsaw)
>If the data protection authority or the law is to be believed, that's not freely given consent It's not. You can report this to an appropriate civil authority and in theory it'll be resolved (possibly with a fine). In…
I've recently started posting my content on LinkedIn (usually just linking to my blog or publication with a short explanation). Main reason is that I'm a bit unhappy with the new Twitter (a place where I used to share…
There are update logs of the train software. Because of them it is known that workers of the company literally snuck into waiting trains and updated the software without the owners knowing. So really, but far from that.
This is a reason why it was detected a year later - the train service was delayed and it spent late November and whole December in service. So the "expiration" intended for 2021 only manifested in 2022.
Very charitable. The "expiry date" was set to the next servicing date and there was no way for competition to fix this hardcoded date and this was not documented in the official documents. Clearly a way to force buyers…
It is also investigated by the Agency of Internal Security and I really doubt they don't have huge problems out of this. This is taken extremely seriously internally. There's a ton of evidence to prove what happened and…
Ironically this one may actually be better represented by a for loop, because after 20 times or so you might want to reconsider your situation.
You already face the same threat then. Many, if not most, nontrivial programs have at least one way to escalate to arbitrary code execution from config. For example sway has exec, basically any useful editor has "on…
It's also a saying I'm Polish, and I also didn't realize it's not in English.
But this is what hobbyist developers care about, which is what ultimately matters.
Can you link to some study that confirms it? This sounds far too simplistic to be true, especially for something as complex and unpredictable as the economy.
Saying it's an urban legend implies it's false, but that's a bit nitpicky IMO. Most people can read most such "scrambled" sentences without a lot of effort, so that part is certainly true (and non-obvious). The original…
As someone who watched all the "original" marvel movies, up to a infinity war I think, I don't think anyone expected any depth from them . I wanted to watch a classical sorry full of non-subverted tropes about a hero…
What about "Gimp generated imagery" for computer graphic, and "brush generated imagery" for oil paintings?
[flagged]
As a pedestrian and car hater I don't mind that too much. Pedestrians always have priority on the walk signal, and there is a special separate light to allow/disallow cars to turn. In practice they are used where it's…
I don't want to halt AI training, I want corporations to fuck off from using my (A)GPL code to train their proprietary models which they then sell to people writing more proprietary code. I would be ok if the derived…
One: anonymous[1] method of payment online. Maybe this is not a problem you like, but your statement is trivially false. [1] pseudonymous (in case of BTC) if we're being pedantic.
>slightly handicapping people who become accustomed to it and then read text without it. Or maybe slightly boosting when reading double spaced? (I didn't read the article yet, my plane is just starting).
>pooperings Just a side note, but it's hard to take you seriously when you resort to such childish name calling. I think your chance of convicting traders (me included) would be much higher if you used some technical…
Can you share some examples of the outdated information and the lack of understanding by the authors, so we may all learn? From a quick skim I noticed the article mentions CopperheadOS, even though it was renamed to…
>The idea is that the secret key material is never compromised as it is assumed in all security cases. That's not true, we have (perfect) forward secrecy, backwards secrecy and key rotation mechanisms because we often…
Even with n=1 you can get something useful. IIRC "on average" if you have ID x than the best population estimation is 2*x. Of course the error margin is immense, but it's still better than nothing.
It's good to consider this but... Plenty of sites expose user ID as a regular integer. In some cases you might want to avoid this (leaking user count to competitors etc), but I have never heard about anyone calling this…
Same in Poland. It's both a generic term ("Metro w Londynie" == London Underground) and a name for a specific system (Metro in Warsaw)
>If the data protection authority or the law is to be believed, that's not freely given consent It's not. You can report this to an appropriate civil authority and in theory it'll be resolved (possibly with a fine). In…
I've recently started posting my content on LinkedIn (usually just linking to my blog or publication with a short explanation). Main reason is that I'm a bit unhappy with the new Twitter (a place where I used to share…