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by dsuth
3930 days ago
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> But the idea that code applying to the primary control functions of an automobile cannot be known (is not published and cannot legally be reverse engineered) is just a bad idea. Why is it a bad idea? Do we know the code base of airplanes? Critical infrastructure, like power and water plants? How about military software that controls missile guidance? The answer isn't to open source everything and let programmers sort it out. We have regulatory and safety boards specifically to counter the issues around public safety that software in critical applications causes. A huge amount of time and money is spent developing standards, and verifying and monitoring compliance with them. Obviously these processes are not always perfect. In this case, it will be interesting to see how far the corruption necessary to include a pollution-defeat spreads. But throwing out the whole process and just publishing code in its place is not a reasonable solution. More stringent black box testing by experts could have caught this issue far sooner. |
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I OWN my car. I do not own nukes and powerplants yet. My evil genius lair is still under construction.
Ownership should come with reversal rights, rooting, reflashing, modifying etc for this one unit I bought.