"Because OS X is secure by design, there’s no need for IT to install additional tools or lock down functionality for employees. And with an automated zero-touch deployment process, they don’t even have to open the box."
Overeating is a psychological disorder. Few Americans would have any ill effects not eating for a few days -- especially the 66% of Americans who are obese or overweight.
The "Body Positivity" movement that encourages people, especially young woman, to be obese or overweight, and tries to criminalize images of slender people in advertising may be the most unhealthy political movement there is.
Obesity kills 300,000 people in the U.S. each year, and with the exception of several hundred people suffering with psychological disorders who manage to starve themselves each year, being slender or even a bit "underweight" has no negative health effects and may have some positive ones.
I wonder if this is in response to out-of-control GitHub employees enforcing arbitrary "Codes of Conduct" on their users, including flagging repositories for using language that's not inclusive enough, or might offend someone?
Seems like without management, an employee with an agenda--especially on that's not related to technology--could go off unchecked for a long time.
Isn't this what you _want_ the U.S. spy agencies to do? See what other countries are up to?
I think the only problem is when they take this technology to look upon their own citizens outside the checks and balances of our system of judges and warrants for this sort of thing.
I do that too! I have the same "suffix" that's on all of them that I leave off the written version for a tiny bit of extra security. It's just a few characters that I've been using consistently for years on written-down passwords.
These types of issues come up a lot in well-meaning organizations. What they don't realize is: "You an include the most people by having the narrowest platform."
So if you're a "privacy technology" group, anything not related to privacy technology should not be part of your focus.
Ever Civil War, for example, has two (or more sides). Now the Tor group has to pick one. If they were simply interested in privacy technology, they wouldn't have to.
You see a similar thing with Codes of Conduct, or "inclusiveness" initiatives. Why can't a Python conference be about Python and only about Python?
I've noticed this too! The communities I deal with that spend the least amount of time worrying about tangential issues like "who's offended" are the CUDA/C++ and the Verilog/VHDL communities. Never see any issues like this come up, ever.
I can assure you, having spent most of this month in and around San Francisco, that most people--even those on bicycles--have no idea how to use them! For example, they don't know how to stop at stop signs and red lights.