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by vog
3230 days ago
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Not sure if you've ever actually been in academia, but on any type of publication (paper, thesis, etc.) it is very well understood that title, abstract, introduction and conclusion are "for the masses" while the rest is for the interested (and assumed-to-be-"qualified") reader. However, I agree that we should expect science journalists to be in the latter group. So I see failures in both sides of the communication. |
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To raise an earlier quote, a central sentence from the abstract: "In this paper, we discuss the requirements for a successful, full-system, lo- cal privilege escalation attack on such media, and show a filesystem based attack vector. " This is also a good description for the masses, and only a very sloppy journalist would read past that and jump to premature conclusions.
(side note: I don't think there's any need to get into credentials about who's been in academia. There are lots of terrible writers, and minority opinions about writing, in academia.)