I think DUIs are quite high there, but I can't really find any clear stats about it. From what I remember it's kind of a problem across all of the prairies.
xthexder
I've got a 9700X and it absolutely rips at only 65W
The trusted 3rd party in this case is actually multiple 3rd parties. There's several options for trusted timestamping just like there's multiple trusted root CAs for SSL. Since the timestamping service is free and public, anyone can use it to sign anything, even self-signed certificates. There's no mechanism to deny access, at least for this portion.
There's always a risk the root CAs all collude and refuse to give out certificates to people they don't like, but at least so far this hasn't been a problem. I don't have a better solution unfortunately. If we could have a 100% decentralized signing scheme that would be ideal, but I have no idea how you would build such a thing without identity verification and some inherit trust in the system
This isn't "my idea", this is how the industry already does code signing. You can't sign something with a date of 1984 because your certificate has a start and end date, and is usually only valid for 1 year.
You can read more about how this works here: https://knowledge.digicert.com/general-information/rfc3161-compliant-time-stamp-authority-server
Code signing certificates work a little differently than SSL certificates. A timestamp is included in the signature so the certificate only needs to be valid at the time of signing. The executable will remain valid forever, even if the certificate later expires. (This is how it works on Windows)
See "Acquiring prohibited firearms": https://rcmp.ca/en/firearms/classes-firearms/classes-firearms-canada
There are specific exemptions that can be applied on top of a PAL to acquire prohibited firearms. For example, law enforcement is allowed to carry handguns.
If it looks like a real gun, it's pretty much exactly as effective for commiting crimes as a real unloaded gun. There's very few legitimate reasons to have a replica firearm and they are highly regulated. Anyone with a criminal record would not be able to get a license for prohibited firearms.
That's unfortunate for you, but not every company operates like that. There's new startups every day, and with all the VC money they're getting, they're in a prime position to be building these new products. The fact so many AI products are under-delivering is enough of an indicator for me to agree with the article's logic
They actually did seize several replica firearms... the warrant was accurate as far as I can tell. The cult leader has a whole Wikipedia article talking about their history with the police. They tried to pull off a citizens arrest on police officers over "COVID crimes". That's insane behavior.
https://www.vice.com/en/article/queen-romana-didulo-citizen-arrest-qanon/
Loads of new technologies are discovered because of people mixing disciplines that hadn't been put together before. A new perspective on a problem can make a massive difference!
This is about Nouveau, the reverse engineered drivers, not Nvidia's official open source drivers... Pretty confusing from just the title.
Usually the opposite is true when gutters are this clogged. They turn into a swamp.