People play competition sports. They except no, or minimal amounts of cheating. Your personal feelings about it don't matter. The kid that plays basketball with 12 years olds on saturday mornings has the right to not have to deal with cheaters, and it doesn't matter if he's in the top .0001% or a shitty player that cannot distinguish his hands from his ears.
Have a quick look at the ladder on Counter Strike, or Faceit, or ranked play on League of Legends/Valorant/Whatever: it's not a niche. These games requiring kernel AC no matter the type of play is another subject, but people play to compare themselves to other, massively.
> a company that has about 25% of the global smartphone market, should be _legally forbidden_ from creating a tightly integrated software/hardware bundle.
Absolutely not. Most of us are perfectly happy with Apple tightly integrating Safari with their hardware.
However, we're going to legally forbid them to prevent users from breaking that tight integration, because it's their device. Apple doesnt "own" the smartphone market: it provides hardware and services, and it shuts the fuck up.
Yes. All of Europe was working for them, and we're now entirely jobless. The industries, governments, all refocused on insects, and now it's gone. We don't know what to do. Send help.
> Electric taxis will be welcomed once they are certified and economical.
Do you believe helicopters are noisy because they're not electric ? Your electric taxi will do the same thing: they need propellers. Propellers that can carry up to 1 ton are fucking loud.
Electric taxis will never be welcomed because they are a dumb idea.
Unless you are in the extremely small minority of people who would actually be affected by it (in which case your company would already have bought ECC ram and made you work with three isolated processes that need to agree to proceed): you don't. You eat shit, crash and restart.
Well, bitflip errors are more of a vulnerability for longer lived values. This could effect fukushima style robots or even medical equipment. ECC implemented outside of ram would save vs triplicate but it was just a question related to the-above idea of an array access being assumed as in+bounds. Thank you.
> Also 4th amendment protections so no one gets access without me knowing about it.
Hahaha
at best you're getting a warrant. Slightly better you're getting a warrant _and_ a gag order. Then it escalates, and having your door kicked in at 6AM is about the best you can hope for.
But sure, you'll know about it. Most likely. Maybe.
Just don't keep anything important in there eh ?
(Note, this definitely applies to colocations too. It's just maybe a tiny bit harder to find which rack is yours, and companies of that size generally have lawyers to prevent that from happening. I'll take my chance with the hosting company.)
> this server is physically held by a long time contributor with a proven track record of securely hosting services.
This is effectively a rando's basement. It doesn't matter that they've been a contributor or whatever. Individuals change, relationships sour. Securely hosting how ? By locking the front door ? By being a random tech company in the midwest ? Or by having proper access control ?
As a little reminder, F-Droid has _all_ the signing keys on its build server. Compromising that is somewhere between "oh that's awful" and "stop the world". These builds go out as automatic updates too. So uh, yeah, I'd like it if it was hosted by someone serious and not my buddy joe who's a sysadmin don't worry
The not knowing is the point. From a security perspective, you have to assume the worst.
And maybe that is F-Droid's point: Security through obscurity. If the build infrastructure with the signing keys is unknown, then it's that much harder for Bad Actor to do things like backdoor E2E encrypted communication apps. This is, of course, the weakness in E2E encryption in apps obtained from mainstream/commercial app stores. For all we know, these may already be backdoored depending on where it came from.
However, the obscurity makes F-Droid hard to trust as an outsider to the project.
400k could get you 10 Dell Poweredges with a 128 core CPU, 256GB of RAM and multiple terabytes of storage _multiple times_. 400k easily covers two of these machines, and colocation space is about 2k per year.
Cloud hosting only makes sense at a very, very small scale, or absurdly large ones.
"Competitive tennis cannot possibly be huge"
"Competitive coding cannot possibly be huge"
People play competition sports. They except no, or minimal amounts of cheating. Your personal feelings about it don't matter. The kid that plays basketball with 12 years olds on saturday mornings has the right to not have to deal with cheaters, and it doesn't matter if he's in the top .0001% or a shitty player that cannot distinguish his hands from his ears.
Have a quick look at the ladder on Counter Strike, or Faceit, or ranked play on League of Legends/Valorant/Whatever: it's not a niche. These games requiring kernel AC no matter the type of play is another subject, but people play to compare themselves to other, massively.
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