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by Sporktacular
1022 days ago
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You proposed requiring consent from the producer of a product/service to have their offering probed. And did so with an example of a house not owned by that producer. If the production company declines, that DOES remove pressure from that company. Companies that rush out rubbish products can presently be named and shamed by independent, uncooperative or even adversarial researchers. Your proposal considers that research illegitimate unless said dodgy company decides to open itself up to scrutiny, which it obviously would not be inclined to do. If you want to suggest the market would respond by not selecting products from such an opaque company, look into how many WhatsApp users care about auditable, open source code vs. those using Signal. |
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In this thread I expanded the detail to include the system to do this could (and imo should) be a legal framework that creates effective communication between companies and researchers.
I also try to adapt my language to try to parallel what the person I'm speaking with is trying to say, rather than telling them they didn't mean what they are telling me they meant. I apologize if created a misunderstanding with my word choice.
Yes I did mention requiring consent from the company as the ideal goal of the model. I am not suggesting the implementation of the model full stop at that just that sentence. In other areas of law, if you can prove a message was received by a company that can sometimes be considered implied consent if they do not respond to it.
We can also require that companies cannot simply refuse for no reason, but leave legal room here for any legitimate reasons to deny should they exist.
And so on and so forth.
It makes the intent of the researcher very clear.
Declining is obviously less pressure for the company in this situation, I agree. But it is not less pressure compared to the current situation. Companies currently have no obligations at all to researchers, and they certainly do not build security out of concern that white hat hackers will out them. They fear black hat hackers. Those are not going away, and if a legal framework exists for companies to work with researchers and better arrange fair conditions for both sides, I would bet companies will be MORE willing to allow research than less.
Because right now they company gets the research for free and then gets to decide whether or not they want to throw the researcher a Starbucks gift card or not. Or just press charges because they are assholes.
I dont really care what the market decides to do. The point of this is to protect the researchers regardless of what the market does. Because to your point, the market has already chosen poorly which is why we have issues on this subject to begin with.
Does this clarify my stance?