Author Archives: pappp

Chat Control faces blocking minority in the EU

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Whew. Dodged it again. Those assholes will try again.
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Jef Raskin’s cul-de-sac and the quest for the humane computer

Source: Ars Technica

Article note: I've gone on the dive the author is basically writing a narrative of myself, and it's a lovely experience. This telling is well written and illustrated. Like many models of computing that didn't take, from a modern perspective one of the biggest problems is Raskin's vision (grimly) wasn't sufficiently amenable to rent-seeking by vendors and their partners. Many of the abstractions he suggested work well in textual formats, but struggle to generalize to other media... and the ones that do have generally been adopted in some modified form much later (Timeline based NDE, zooming interfaces, etc.) The Humane Interface is still worth a read, for the theory, to understand where many conventions came from, and to see the differences in how interface conventions are relative to how they were conceived.

Consider the cul-de-sac. It leads off the main street past buildings of might-have-been to a dead-end disconnected from the beaten path. Computing history, of course, is filled with such terminal diversions, most never to be fully realized, and many for good reason. Particularly when it comes to user interfaces and how humans interact with computers, a lot of wild ideas deserved the obscure burials they got.

But some deserved better. Nearly every aspiring interface designer believed the way we were forced to interact with computers was limiting and frustrating, but one man in particular felt the emphasis on design itself missed the forest for the trees. Rather than drowning in visual metaphors or arcane iconographies doomed to be as complex as the systems they represented, the way we deal and interact with computers should stress functionality first, simultaneously considering both what users need to do and the cognitive limits they have. It was no longer enough that an interface be usable by a human—it must be humane as well.

What might a computer interface based on those principles look like? As it turns out, we already know.

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Bolsonaro Convicted of Attempting a Coup in Brazil, Sentenced to 27 Years in Prison

Source: NYT > World

Article note: Oh look, the US is demonstrably less functional than a historically unstable South American country, _they_ managed to convict their former leader who tried to coup their way back into power.

Brazil’s Supreme Court convicted the former president of trying to cling to power after losing the 2022 election, including a plan to assassinate his opponent.

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Software packages with more than 2 billion weekly downloads hit in supply-chain attack

Source: Ars Technica

Article note: A whole pile of one-liner packages used all over the place, compromised by a basic phish. I reiterate: I sincerely believed for some time that node/npm was a joke about bad design. Despite knowing that people take it seriously, I'm not entirely sure I was wrong.

Hackers planted malicious code in open source software packages with more than 2 billion weekly updates in what is likely to be the world’s biggest supply-chain attack ever.

The attack, which compromised nearly two dozen packages hosted on the npm repository, came to public notice on Monday in social media posts. Around the same time, Josh Junon, a maintainer or co-maintainer of the affected packages, said he had been “pwned” after falling for an email that claimed his account on the platform would be closed unless he logged into a site and updated his two-factor authentication credentials.

Defeating 2FA the easy way

“Sorry everyone, I should have paid more attention,” Junon, who uses the moniker Qix, wrote. “Not like me; have had a stressful week. Will work to get this cleaned up.”

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All 54 lost clickwheel iPod games have now been preserved for posterity

Source: Ars Technica

Article note: Not something I directly care about, but an impressive project. We're going to lose more and more culture to dead DRM and dead online distribution, and this is a model effort to avoid that.
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The MacBook has a sensor that knows the exact angle of the screen hinge

Source: Hacker News

Article note: I'm amazed by the assortment of ways I've encountered laptops doing this. I've seen a whole-ass IMU in each half. I've seen several magnets and hall-effect sensors that align in significant positions. I've seen a small number of contacts reading significant positions in the hinge. I've seen a switch in the catch of a closure latch. Having a continuous encoder in the hinge is honestly one of the sanest options.
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Nvidia Dominates GPU Shipments With 94% Share

Source: Slashdot

Article note: 94% Nividia : 6% AMD : negligible other players on discrete GPUs is considerably more lopsided than I realized.

An anonymous reader shares a report: The total number of GPUs sold for the second quarter of 2025 hit 11.6 million units, while desktop PC CPUs went up to 21.7 million units, according to a Jon Peddie Research report. This is a 27% increase in graphics card shipments and a 21.6% jump in CPU shipments from the last quarter, which is a change from the usual drop in deliveries we've seen in recent years. "AIB prices dropped for midrange and entry-level, while high-end AIB prices increased, and most retail suppliers ran out of stock. This is very unusual for the second quarter," said Jon Peddie Research president Dr. Jon Peddie. "We think it is a continuation of higher prices expected due to the tariffs and buyers trying to get ahead of that." As for the three major GPU manufacturers, Nvidia still has the lead, taking in 94% of the market -- an increase of 2.1% over the previous quarter -- while AMD is at a distant second place with 6%. This is still a much better position than Intel, though, whose market share is so small it did not even register on the chart.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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The worst possible antitrust outcome

Source: Hacker News

Article note: I'm not sure I agree that this is the worst possible case, because they could have done some really egregious things like "accidentally" kill the only competitor in the browser space's almost-controlled-opposition primary income stream, or handed control of the dominant browser engine to some even more distasteful techbro company who would be additionally deeply in debt from the acquisition. But it sure is bad, and I hadn't quite thought through the "Giving other third parties access to reams of collected personal information" aspect of the fake remedy.
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Mis-issued certificates for 1.1.1.1 DNS service pose a threat to the Internet

Source: Ars Technica

Article note: Someone fucked up and granted a random asshole certificates for one of the most widely used DNS servers, which they most certainly do not control. Good news, not in the chain of trust for Mozilla or Google. Bad news, in the chain of trust for Microsoft. The PKI infra is always worrying when you hear about it.

People in Internet security circles are sounding the alarm over the issuance of three TLS certificates for 1.1.1.1, a widely used DNS service from content delivery network Cloudflare and the Asia Pacific Network Information Centre (APNIC) Internet registry.

The certificates, issued in May, can be used to decrypt domain lookup queries encrypted through DNS over HTTPS, a protocol that provides end-to-end encryption when end-user devices seek the IP address of a particular domain they want to access. Some security experts are also concerned that the certificates may underpin other sensitive services, such as WARP, a VPN offered by Cloudflare. The certificates remained valid at the time this post went live on Ars.

Key failures

Although the certificates were issued four months ago, their existence came to public notice only on Wednesday in a post to an online discussion forum. They were issued by Fina RDC 2020, a certificate authority that’s subordinate to the root certificate holder Fina Root CA. The Fina Root CA, in turn, is trusted by the Microsoft Root Certificate Program, which governs which certificates are trusted by the Windows operating system. Microsoft Edge accounts for approximately 5 percent of the browsers actively used on the Internet.

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Judge: Google can keep Chrome, must share search data with “qualified competitors”

Source: Ars Technica

Article note: It's a weird situation. On one hand, we've basically determined that yes, they're abusing a monopoly, and no, we won't be imposing any meaningful penalties. On the other hand, there are very few entities that could end up with Chrome (or Android) without doing something even more harmful, and the search bundling payouts are what's keeping Firefox (as the only serious competitor in one of the spaces) afloat, and so on. ...Boy we've allowed some structurally abusive shit to get deeply rooted, and it's pretty clear via the various open-washing and deals between large players that much of it was planned/intended/done with careful legal consideration.

Google has avoided the worst-case scenario in the pivotal search antitrust case brought by the US Department of Justice. More than a year ago, the Department of Justice (DOJ) secured a major victory when Google was found to have violated the Sherman Antitrust Act. The remedy phase took place earlier this year, with the DOJ calling for Google to divest the market-leading Chrome browser, release data to competitors, and end many of its search distribution deals.

The government is getting almost none of that. DC District Court Judge Amit Mehta has ruled that Google doesn't have to give up the Chrome browser to mitigate its illegal monopoly in online search. The court will only require a handful of modest data and behavioral remedies, forcing Google to release some search data to competitors and limit its ability to make exclusive distribution deals.

Chrome remains with Google

This case drew many comparisons to the decades-old antitrust case against Microsoft, which nearly saw the company split in two. The company narrowly avoided that fate, and it seems Google will as well—the DOJ came up short on the so-called structural remedies. While there will be some changes to search distribution, the court didn't believe that a breakup was fair in this situation.

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