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This is why I want to have a “dumb” TV, I only want it to support high quality video and multiple inputs and have no brains at all. I can’t find any decent so far.


If this model works as expected, then it should take into account those who "would have die very soon" otherwise. It models the deaths that would have happened if it were not for COVID and measures the difference against that number. So the person you mentioned should be counted in the projection.


What about Kiev? Is it a worse option?


> The automotive industry started taking cybersecurity seriously about six years ago and started investing in designing and deploying cybersecurity solutions.

This might have been the report that made them pay attention: https://www.wired.com/2015/07/hackers-remotely-kill-jeep-hig...


How did you get all that data from government databases directly? Do they provide some sort an API for bulk export?


Why break up though? I believe there are ways to allow smaller companies compete against giants efficiently.


The point is to place a cap on the scale of organizations, enabling multiple smaller entities to provide the same services as the original larger organization, but with increased competition at all levels because the large organization's bloat and efficiencies of scale are eliminated. Part of the goal here is to remove efficiencies of scale because they suppress widespread employment as well as opportunity for individual skills advancement. Large scale providers eliminate employment opportunities and the skills advancement that goes with them simply because their scale eliminates any other players that could exist in the market.


> The choice of headlines does convince me that journalism isn’t getting better.

I think it is a decently chose headline. Moderately sensational, yet eye catching and conveying the premises, that it is going to be about a gloomy prediction that may or may not turn out true.


Ignoring your political reason as completely unrelated to the article.

On the practical side, do you know any language that uses Cyrillic alphabet? If no, then you are not used to it and this is why it looks awkward, blocky, etc. and cursive is not a nightmare and is very readable, much so like cursive text written in English.

If you do know any language that uses Cyrillic, can you provide examples to support your characterizations?


Do you know if it's possible to get ahold of a copy?


As far as I know, he never finished it, so unless he still has and would give out a copy it is probably unobtainable.


During the initial attack phase, cyber actors scan the internet for SonarQube instances exposed to the open Internet using the default port (9000) and a publicly accessible IP address. Cyber actors then use default administrator credentials (username: admin, password: admin) to attempt to access SonarQube instances.

Given how often this happens, not having a default password and forcing users to set it should be a standard practice these days. Relying on administrators of the instance doing the right thing obviously keeps failing, thus an option to do the wrong thing should be removed completely.


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