Links for Resilience #4
Security
An Operating System Bug Exposes 200 Million Critical Devices
This is a big one, and in an area where we’re unlikely to have good update processes.
This ties back to an important property of resilient software:
design for safe auto-updates
This is not a solved problem in all domains, but one we should continue to work towards solving. It’s especially important as we have more and more connected and Internet-of-Things (IOT) devices.
Related: Huge Survey of Firmware Finds No Security Gains in 15 Years
If you haven’t seen this post going deep on the Capital One / AWS Server-Side Request Forgery exploit, check it out. There are interesting parallels to the protections we can use for Cross-Site Request Forgery.
Of import here is how the author looks at root causes and examines how the platforms do (Google) or don’t (AWS) help fix this at scale.
Sustainability
“paper straws put the lie to the belief that we can consume our way out of the problems created by consumerism”
from The Case Against Paper Straws. Several good insights in this one. Discussions of sustainability continue to place the blame on consumer buying patterns, but effective changes will have to come at a systems and society levels.
Is using public cloud scalable for your organization? Will Larson has thoughts about how to assess the answer.
An important story about the person who is swimming through the Pacific garbage/plastic patch. May it inspire us to do better.
Interactive maps from Reveal showing how climate change may impact various national parks. Visualization tools are powerful for helping us see the problems more clearly.
E-scooters may not be as eco-friendly as we thought? Other options may still be better for the “last mile”.
Full Disclosure: I have a professional affiliation with the publisher of this article.
Society
Worlds of Ursula K. Le Guin, a beautiful documentary on the life of the legendary author, is now available on PBS. If you’re not familiar with her work, I highly recommend it. Ursula writes with both deep thought and deep beauty, and I’ve thoroughly enjoyed everything I have read so far.
A couple of the classic favorites are The Dispossessed and Wizard of Earthsea.
Also in the news: Ice, Ice, Baby: Ursula Le Guin's 'Left Hand Of Darkness'
Activism is ramping up around Palantir and Amazon supplying the technology of tyranny. Reporting from Vice.
Related transparency reporting:
Amazon Told Police It Has Partnered With 200 Law Enforcement Agencies
Revealed: This Is Palantir’s Top-Secret User Manual for Cops
Compare and contrast these stories on the future of meat:
This Is the Beginning of the End of the Beef Industry
The Vegetarians Who Turned Into Butchers
While they may seem incongruous, one thread running between them is that mass beef consumption and CAFO farming are not sustainable.
We live in an “oil-powered” era. As prices to extract and process oil increase beyond the value they provide, how will society change? Here is one person’s thoughts on the issue. What are yours?
Self
Scouting in the Netherlands has a meaningful upgrade to American snipe-hunting: “Dropping”. Did you grow up in a community with a resilience building tradition for youths? What was it?
No surprise: “loot boxes” are a pernicious form of user manipulation.
In similar news, Reveal says ‘If you have an addiction, you’re screwed’ – How Facebook and social casinos target the vulnerable
How are you opting out of these technological patterns and/or discouraging their misuse?
Summary
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