Sometimes you just glance at a headline and read it wrong: "Germany Interior Minister Pushing For Deployment Of Facial Recognition Software In Pubic Areas"
It's hard to believe so many people consider the use of shortened URLs a security measure. It is not, and was never intended to be. A URL is exposed, by definition, whether long or shortened. A shortened URL is a convenience, not a security tool. Some people misuse base64 encoding for "security" as well, but it does not mean we should get rid of base64 encoding.
This is enough for me to stop buying Lexmark printers. I've never used 3rd party ink, but I do not like the idea of Lexmark abusing patent law, especially to extort money from its customers. A company might be better off to value its customers enough to offer them what they want. This seems to be yet another poor decision made in a clueless boardroom.
It would be nice if users would file a legal complaint on YouTube (there is a form, under "...More", "Report") because someone is abusing the DMCA to hide content users are entitled to see. If nobody complains, YouTube has little incentive to stop abusive DMCA practices.
That is not a study. It is an opinion article. It's stupid to believe that there are that many significant errors in production code (with the possible exception of phone apps).
The defects referred to in David Soergel's reference ("Code Complete", written more than 10 years ago) include things such as misaligned output, insufficient error trapping, invalid data input filters, user interface problems, and many other errors that do not cause "wrong answers".
Furthermore, debugging is a major process in software development. There are many, many errors that appear in any non-trivial software project as it is being written and tested. Many of these prevent the software from running in the first place. With testing, these are largely eliminated, particularly those that can significantly affect results.
For example, in a scientific application with a limited number of users, it may be completely acceptable for the application to crash on invalid input. It may take more programming time than it's worth to add elegant error handling. This is a "software defect", yet it has zero effect on the results. Many of the defects referred to in "Code Complete" are of this nature.
In addition, the statics quoted above (and all over the internet), are mere guesswork. The article even states "The factors going into the above estimates are rank speculation, and the conclusion varies widely depending on the guessed values," and this in the "rigorous analysis"!
In my opinion, this does not merit appearance in Tech Dirt, and certainly lowers the average quality of this site. It's a typical scare-hype article, all too common today.
In the US, the USPTO is happy to award a patent for almost any idea, concept, or thought, no matter how trivial and regardless of prior art. After all, a patent WAS issued for the generic idea of crowdfunding.
I have just removed Travelers from my list of acceptable insurance companies. I'm sure it won't have a significant effect on Travelers, but it makes me feel better.
If GM owns the software in my car, that means they can permanently disable my car whenever they get the urge. They can just remove the software they own from the car I own, and my car becomes a large brick.
Need a boost in auto sales? Kill 10,000 cars and put some demand into the market. Legally.
Considering their precipitous stock price decline, it seems like some upstanding citizen would file a class action lawsuit against Rightscorp for neglecting to notify shareholders of known risks and adverse business conditions.
John Chen has demonstrated publicly that he is completely out of touch with the tech market, and quite possibly reality in general.
Many apps run on Android only, or iOS only, or Windows only. Small developers may be completely unable to support additional platforms. They may not have the knowledge, equipment, or time.
As slavery was abolished quite some time ago, it probably is not politically (or legally) palatable to force these people to work on something they are unable to complete.
"If people had understood how patents would be granted when most of today's ideas were invented, and had taken out patents, the industry would be at a complete standstill today. I feel certain that some large company will patent some obvious thing related to interface, object orientation, algorithm, application extension or other crucial technique. If we assume this company has no need of any of our patents then the have a 17-year right to take as much of our profits as they want." Bill Gates, 1991
The NSA is out of control. If the President ordered them today to stop surveillance on U.S. citizens, Germany, France, the U.K., Australia, and Japan, would they? I think not. The NSA is above (or below) the law and the U.S. Constitution.
(In case the link doesn't go through, the privacy policy consists of someone headed to an outhouse in the deep snow, with the caption "Close the Door Before You Go.")
When a company's business is in decline for whatever reason, whether lack of innovation, poot marketing, or lack of management competency, they need money.
Maybe the boss says, "We've got to increase revenue!" Someone pipes up, "We've got all this valuable IP we're not utilizing...".
The company turns to lawsuits as a business so they execs can keep their jobs, since without income there's no money for salaries and bonuses.
On the post: New Acting Attorney General Part Of A Patent Scam Company Recently Shut Down By The FTC And Fined Millions
Re: Re: Ooh, a "failed politician"! -- He could be part HONEST, then!
https://www.quora.com/Has-Trump-broken-any-laws-yet
On the post: How One Young Black Man Supporting Trump Massively Skews The LA Times Presidential Poll
On the post: Daily Deal: VPN Unlimited Subscription
Or...
On the post: Germany Interior Minister Pushing For Deployment Of Facial Recognition Software In Public Areas
Misreading
On the post: Report Exposes Flaws In Link Shorteners That Reveal Sensitive Info About Users And Track Their Offline Movements
On the post: In the Wake Of The Latest Terrorist Attacks, Here's A Rational Approach To Saving Lives
A more effective approach.
On the post: After Failing To Use Copyright & Trademark Law To Stop Printer Ink Resellers, Lexmark Finally Scores A Victory With Patent Law
No Lexmark for Me
On the post: Sony Music Issues Takedown On Copyright Lecture About Music Copyrights By Harvard Law Professor
File a Legal Complaint
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2GGE_ToREPw&feature=youtu.be
On the post: Frequent Errors In Scientific Software May Undermine Many Published Results
That's not a study.
The defects referred to in David Soergel's reference ("Code Complete", written more than 10 years ago) include things such as misaligned output, insufficient error trapping, invalid data input filters, user interface problems, and many other errors that do not cause "wrong answers".
Furthermore, debugging is a major process in software development. There are many, many errors that appear in any non-trivial software project as it is being written and tested. Many of these prevent the software from running in the first place. With testing, these are largely eliminated, particularly those that can significantly affect results.
For example, in a scientific application with a limited number of users, it may be completely acceptable for the application to crash on invalid input. It may take more programming time than it's worth to add elegant error handling. This is a "software defect", yet it has zero effect on the results. Many of the defects referred to in "Code Complete" are of this nature.
In addition, the statics quoted above (and all over the internet), are mere guesswork. The article even states "The factors going into the above estimates are rank speculation, and the conclusion varies widely depending on the guessed values," and this in the "rigorous analysis"!
In my opinion, this does not merit appearance in Tech Dirt, and certainly lowers the average quality of this site. It's a typical scare-hype article, all too common today.
On the post: Nope, You Can't Patent A Generic Idea Like Crowdfunding
Back in the USA
On the post: Travelers Insurance Rains Down Trademark Disputes Over Any Use Of An Umbrella Anywhere
Vote with your Dollars
On the post: GM Says That While You May Own Your Car, It Owns The Software In It, Thanks To Copyright
GM Owns the software?
Need a boost in auto sales? Kill 10,000 cars and put some demand into the market. Legally.
Remind me not to buy GM products.
On the post: Rightscorp Discovering That Harassing Broadband Users Isn't The Cash Cow It Thought It Would Be
Sue 'em!
On the post: BlackBerry CEO Thinks Net Neutrality Means Forcing Developers To Make Apps For His Struggling Platform
Reality Disconnect
Many apps run on Android only, or iOS only, or Windows only. Small developers may be completely unable to support additional platforms. They may not have the knowledge, equipment, or time.
As slavery was abolished quite some time ago, it probably is not politically (or legally) palatable to force these people to work on something they are unable to complete.
On the post: New Emails Show That Feds Instructed Police To Lie About Using Stingray Mobile Phone Snooping
Transparency?
On the post: Microsoft's Intense Lobbying Works: Goodlatte To Drop Plan To Allow For Faster Review Of Bad Software Patents
How things change.
Bill Gates, 1991
On the post: This Weekend's Rally Against NSA Surveillance Gaining Steam
The NSA is out of control.
On the post: US Patent Office Seeking 'Partnership' With Software Community, Hoping To 'Enhance Quality Of Software Patents'
Enhance Quality?
A program is not an invention any more than an idea or a novel.
On the post: California Attorney General Uses Twitter To Threaten United Airlines With Possible Legal Action
All you need is a policy. Any policy.
http://xpda.com/junkmail/privacy.htm
(In case the link doesn't go through, the privacy policy consists of someone headed to an outhouse in the deep snow, with the caption "Close the Door Before You Go.")
On the post: Sparkfun CEO Explains IP Obesity: Companies Who Rely Too Much On IP Flop
Causation
Maybe the boss says, "We've got to increase revenue!" Someone pipes up, "We've got all this valuable IP we're not utilizing...".
The company turns to lawsuits as a business so they execs can keep their jobs, since without income there's no money for salaries and bonuses.
Even SCO used to produce something.
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