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One of the most fascinating things to me about science is how some critics complain that scientists don't know everything, and sometimes change their minds.

As though those things are bugs, not features.

I can't quite figure out if those complaints come about because people are DISAPPOINTED that there are things we don't know, or they're unhappy with the things we do.

must die. On that we’re all agreed. Amirite?

and W3C want to set the standard for 21st-century . They seek to do away with phishing, credential breaches, and MITM attacks. And the major browsers seem to be playing along.

But is anyone experiencing déjà vu here? In , we’ve heard it all before.🤣

by @richi at
techbeacon.com/webauthnctap-fi

@richi Right -- should have made that clear.

My biggest complaint is that more entities that supposedly care about security--banks, etc.--don't allow the use of U2F keys (and many won't even get away from SMS 2nd factors. I guess they need a major breach to drive the point home).

@richi Personally, I'm least enthused by attempts to get rid of passwords via biometrics. It's kind of like Social Security numbers as they're set up now: once it's lost somehow, there's no good way to undo the damage.

Changeable Passwords/PIN numbers plus cryptographic authentication (e.g. U2F/Yubikeys) seem extremely solid to me as a combination.

Plan for quantum supremacy

"Things are getting real for researchers in the UC Santa Barbara John Martinis/Google group. They are making good on their intentions to declare supremacy in a tight global race to build the first quantum machine to outperform the world's best classical supercomputers."

sciencedaily.com/releases/2018

counter.social/media/vAO6p7pKl

From: Maria Popova

Microbial oceanographer Penny Chisholm discovered the smallest photosynthetic cell on the planet, which she and her team first mistook for noise in the instrument.

Life, even at its simplest, is so complex and marvelous: Each of these tiny organisms, called Prochlorococcus, is only 1/100 the width of a human hair yet has 2,000 genes in its genome

(from a 2018 TED talk)

Scientists just found something under arctic ice that raises hopes of finding extraterrestrial life

bgr.com/2018/04/11/arctic-lake

Superb technology and fab work.

Start of most sensitive search yet for dark matter axion

(Research funded in part by the National Science Foundation)

phys.org/news/2018-04-sensitiv

counter.social/media/7gWs9KiDH

Note all the industrial control system vulnerabilities in this bulletin.

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Jonathan Williams

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