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Security

Security quote of the week

So many people think that social media companies should be forced to keep up the content they like, and forced to takedown the content they disagree with. It never occurs to them that their own personal tastes differ from others and that there's no way to write a regulation that takes into the account the bad taste of some clueless politicians.
Mike Masnick

Comments (30 posted)

Kernel development

Kernel release status

The current development kernel is 5.10-rc4, released on November 15. "All looks good, and nothing makes me go 'uhhuh, 5.10 looks iffy'. So go test, let's get this all solid and calmed down, and this will hopefully be one of those regular boring releases even if it's certainly not been on the smaller side..."

Stable updates: none have been released in the last week. The 5.9.9, 5.4.78, 4.19.158, 4.14.207, 4.9.244, and 4.4.244 updates are in the review process; they are due on November 19.

Comments (none posted)

Quote of the week

I'm not a scheduler hacker,
I'm a scheduler hacker's mate.
I'm only hacking the scheduler,
'cos trying to run 32-bit applications on systems where not all of the CPUs support it is GREAT.
Will Deacon

Comments (none posted)

Development

Firefox 83.0 released

Version 83.0 of the Firefox browser is out. Headline features include a new HTTPS-only mode, JavaScript performance improvements, and more; see the release notes for details.

Comments (13 posted)

No more Flash support in Firefox

Mozilla has announced that the Adobe Flash era is coming to an end. "Firefox version 84 will be the final version to support Flash. On January 26, 2021 when we release Firefox version 85, it will ship without Flash support, improving our performance and security." One suspects that few people will miss this support.

Comments (37 posted)

youtube-dl repository restored at GitHub

The GitHub repository for the youtube-dl utility, which is used to download video content from various web sites (including YouTube, thus the name), has been restored. As we reported in last week's edition, GitHub had taken the repository down due to a DMCA notice from the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). The only change made to youtube-dl is the removal of some tests that downloaded a few seconds of certain music videos; those videos were specifically targeted by the RIAA in its complaint.

Comments (8 posted)

Development quotes of the week

It’s fun to think about human systems, like those in a restaurant, from a programmer’s point of view. A fry cook’s job closely resembles that of an operating system scheduler, complete with optimization points and edge cases. One can try to optimize human systems as if they were computer systems, but it’s critical to understand the subtle human aspects of the system when evaluating improvements.
Mark Mossberg

We erred in our arrogant belief that DRM would remain clunky and rare. Media companies and their technology providers have laughed at us all the way to the proverbial bank. Then, the W3C and Mozilla Foundation capitulated with EME. Simply put, the boycott won't work now because DRM, along with the ubiquity of proprietary software in (at least as some component of) every popular platform means that DRM is seamless, easy-to-use, and rarely gets in the way of paying customers. We in fact tried, and mostly succeeded, in boycotting DRM when it was cumbersome, full of bugs, and annoyed users in the early 2000s. Today, most users of DRM don't even know it's there, or who provides it. While I'm not a user of browser-based streaming, I am still embarrassed to say that until yesterday I didn't even know Widevine was a Google product. I thought others were fighting the good fight against DRM and I mostly ignored it. But no one really is. DRM may not rule the technological world for software freedom activists who shun proprietary platforms. But it silently rules everyone else's tech world, and boycotting DRM effectively means boycotting most technology.
Bradley M. Kuhn

Comments (none posted)

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