URLs aren't usable, but people are forced to rely on them for so much -- browsing, security, sharing. Expect to see changes to how Chrome displays identity in the coming year. @emschec @estark37https://www.wired.com/story/google-wants-to-kill-the-url/ …
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agree with Rich. sounds like the problem is not enough education. teach kids how to browse, code, use social media, practice internet safety, etc. then they’ll grow up and make the web better. sometimes a “problem” can’t be “fixed” with a cool new browser feature. it takes time.
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Solving problems via education doesn't scale. But there are better approaches that do.
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that may be so, but solutions via education are long-lasting. i’m a big-picture, bottom-up kind of thinker.
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No, they're irrelevant by the time they're finished. It'd be like educating kids about the risks of buying from door-to-door vacuum cleaner salesmen.
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But a general template to be wary of door to door solicitations that are extrapolated to all forms of communication would remain relevant. Think of how classes are designed in C++ and then create a template which can be built upon.
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Attack and defense scale differently. Whatever attacks you want to educate people to defend against, attackers will evolve new methods much more quickly. Education is not a solution.
End of conversation
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That's what
@Google always does. Been a user of their products since they were released and every update is the epitome of what you just wrote.Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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