tacotuesday | 10 years ago | on: Sony Filed a Copyright Claim Against the Stock Video I Licensed to Them
tacotuesday's comments
tacotuesday | 10 years ago | on: Engineers Build Ugly Products
I've seen plenty of management decisions where, instead of making a choice which will apply to all users, management decides to make it yet another check box buried in the preferences section of an application.
It takes a week or two before Mgt settles on whether it should be on or off. If 90% of users want off, then off it is.
Then two months down the road, the 10% that like it on now want to extend the feature a bit more. And with that, the process repeats, another check box is nested.
Before long, you're left with a management designed, byzantine architecture of wheels and knobs and checkboxes everywhere.
It's not just us engineers doing it :)
tacotuesday | 10 years ago | on: The End of Software Versions
tacotuesday | 10 years ago | on: Why I Still Get Shunned by Taxi Drivers
Never used Uber/Lyft, so maybe the answer would be obvious if I had, but...
What stops drivers from giving bad ratings based on race or destination? Likewise, what stops passengers from giving drivers bad ratings based on race or some other prejudice?
tacotuesday | 10 years ago | on: What PostgreSQL has over other open source SQL databases: Part II
tacotuesday | 10 years ago | on: Swarm vs. Fleet vs. Kubernetes vs. Mesos
tacotuesday | 10 years ago | on: Swarm vs. Fleet vs. Kubernetes vs. Mesos
tacotuesday | 10 years ago | on: Should You Be Allowed to Invest in a Lawsuit?
In a case like that, it seems like a tool to perpetuate economic inequality.
tacotuesday | 10 years ago | on: OAuth Has Ruined Everything
There are very successful businesses (mint.com) built around the concept of sharing extremely sensitive credentials for some reward.
In the tutum intro video I watched yesterday, the pitchman is asking developers within the first minute of video to enter AWS credentials into his website I've never heard of.
If anyone would balk at that suggestion, I would expect it to be developers, yet they are so successful, Docker is buying them for meeellions of dollars.
I'm really surprised no one in the thread has yet mentioned yubico as a solution. I like yubikeys because they are something users can't upload. Keys are a concept everyone understands, and despite what I'm told by friends, I've yet to lose mine. I've never lost my car/house/mailbox keys either though.
Maybe I'm odd in both respects. I keep my credentials and keys close to me.
tacotuesday | 10 years ago | on: Docker Acquires Tutum
tacotuesday | 10 years ago | on: Docker Acquires Tutum
Searching for "Tatum video introduction" on a search engine only returns results about a certain movie star, which is not terribly helpful.
tacotuesday | 10 years ago | on: Apple tells U.S. judge 'impossible' to unlock new iPhones
http://www.cnet.com/news/obama-denies-that-us-spied-on-germa...!
"the United States is not monitoring and will not monitor the communications" means, "Was monitoring up until just now."
Here Apple says "We can't unlock new iPhones." Apple says nothing about their ability to restore iCloud backups or load software to capture evidence from a locked phone.
tacotuesday | 10 years ago | on: IBM Gives the Chinese Government Access to Software Code
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2015/02/17/1364910/-Breaking-K...
The NSA buys lots of storage, so it's only natural they would demand and have access to poorly tested/reviewed code hiding behind closed sources.
tacotuesday | 10 years ago | on: IBM Gives the Chinese Government Access to Software Code
Too bad we have laws and agencies that demand the exact opposite:
https://www.fsf.org/blogs/licensing/epa-opposed-dmca-exempti...
I wonder who in our government thinks deploying code without review or testing is a good idea? Does anyone know where one might find a full list of these people/agencies?
tacotuesday | 10 years ago | on: Cops are asking Ancestry.com and 23andMe for their customers’ DNA
Sometimes, it's better NOT to know these things. );
tacotuesday | 10 years ago | on: TPP could thwart computer security research and tinkering
That goes both ways. By pushing it to the lame duck session, it gives us an opportunity to neutralize TPP. We can vote out anyone who indicates support for it before they get the opportunity to vote on it.
Make it an election issue. Make the candidate go on record. If they won't go on record against TPP, then we can assume they are for TPP and vote them out. Don't even let them through the primaries.
tacotuesday | 10 years ago | on: TPP could thwart computer security research and tinkering
http://www.bloomberg.com/bw/articles/2013-10-08/did-obama-ju...
Does this agreement do anything to address the double standard? Is a local dictator still allowed to overrule whatever findings a court makes?
I really don't see how this chapter will be enforceable. If it isn't enforceable, it's hardly free trade. We just enter an era where tariffs are now decided by a court and approved or denied by local government. Much more uncertain and potentially much more expensive that way. "Oh, you sold a bunch of phones? Well, now you owe us a billion dollars. Didn't plan for that? Sorry, take it up with a judge."
The DMCA states they are filing the take down under penalty of perjury. It's very slippery though.
If Sony says "This is A, and I own A. Take down Small Time's video." Then all is good so long as Sony actually owns A. If the content is B, it's a great inconvenience to Small Time, but there's really no recourse.
However, what Sony did was say "This is B, I own B. Take down Small Time's video." The content IS B. Sony has misrepresented their ownership of B. Now they've perjured themselves.
My understanding is that perjury is punishable by up to five years in prison. It seems like someone at Sony should now be under investigation for this little 'oops.' Even if Small Time is satisfied with the outcome, it sounds like someone at Sony still violated the law.