@JBis yeah Republicans are only small government when it fits their agenda, when it comes to putting people in jail for drugs, military spending or forcing women to have children, they are all about big government
I think anti-trust regulations and rules have failed to be enforced and we're entering an age of international corporate rule. The system favors those in power too easily, so I support government regulations to protect the rights of the average citizen, things like increased minimum wage tied to cost of living, universal healthcare, abolish private prisons
but I believe strongly that capitalism has an important role to play in innovation and would never support a take over of the economy by the government in a communist sense
At least in NY (and I think other places), the issue was teachers were teaching inconsistently and it was hard to judge performance. So they implemented standardized testing, but then teachers just taught to the test and people could just memorize information. And they still can't fire shitty teachers due to tenure. And that just scratches the surface.
I just thing the bar is shifted way too far towards the richest, most powerful people
depends on the state
the issue in Arizona is there aren't enough teachers to fill the jobs, the pay is such shit no one wants to work here as a teacher and they have people without a teaching degree/qualifications filling in as long term semi-permenant subs
class sizes are huge and there's no funding for electives / special interests
so it's the same standardized testing problem with no room for anything else but that
then they say, why pay these teachers more if they aren't doing a good job? and it's because they can't possibly do a good job if there aren't enough teachers to go around
no, she traditionally would travel back home but now that we have the kids, the type of job she would get when you factor in daycare costs is just not worth it
speaking of which, if summer schools kids are generally consdiering to be the worst of the bunch and they can learn stuff that fast why can't they teach at that speed normally
actually no that's not true, Ididn't do poorly across the board, but I got into the database class without a pre-req in that fuckin' math logic language
and failed a few questions on exams that were about it
I wish math in school skipped the bullshit tbh, I don't really wanna learn how to fucking graph a curve and use the formula to determine shit about a parabola
yeah, I mean "external" "customers" aka dealerships use it, so it's a bit iffy, but again the portal they have to go through is extremely secure so it's not the worst thing
Also I've tried to improve that but it's hard to push through the beurocracy sometimes, I'm hoping this new CIO will improve that area
@ballBreaker yes and no, but i'd rather work at a software development company like apple, google, micorosft or even smaller discord, shopify, spotify etc. who need dedicated security people. I could potentially work for a startup but most don't know the funds nor knowledge to hire a security person. But I suspect that will change very soon.
@DaveS yeah i mean you guys aren't doing super security difficult stuff. But then agains your entire industry (applicances aka fridges) has terrible security.
I mean you can't just automate what I am going to do. At least not in the near future.
Honestly software development will be automated away faster then what I want to do.
it's not just running scanner software to check whether you santized inputs
thats just the basics and tbh falls more into penn testing
@DaveS @ballBreaker let me give you a better example. Let's say I came to you and said I want to build a new password manager. It's multi device, so I can login from any device and get all my passwords. Oh and if i forget my password I want to be able to reset it whenever. I also want to be able to share it with other people if I need to. And it'd be pretty cool if I could share it with someone without them knowing the actual password if its just for a one time thing.
Both of you could probably implement that, but the security would be dog shit. You likely have no idea how to implement that in a secure manner. I mean maybe you know to use HTTPS and to use prepared statment to prevent sql injection but you have no idea how to store those passwords.
How would I store the passwords? In practice I would use a database encrypted at rest, stored in a private network only accessible by my permissioned backend servers with the appropriate credentials
the server would use the auth layer to permission users and allow access to their passwords and their passwords only, the application would never store the passwords outside of application memory, no persistent storage
so you have to encrypt the passwords not hash them so they can be viewed and you can't rely on a user provided key because if they lose it they can't reset it
curious to see how he proposes letting the user recover their account when locked out without something unresettable and still not provide the server access