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dlr5288
dlr5288
3/28/2016 7:49:08 PM
User Rank
Platinum
Security
I like the fact that he states that when it comes to security there is never enough to be done. It makes me feel a little better knowing that is their mindset because it's true.

Security is a huge problem and should always be on the top of everyone's mind. That's one negative moving towards a more digital world. It's that much easier for hackers to get information.

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JohnBarnes
JohnBarnes
3/28/2016 9:05:14 PM
User Rank
Platinum
Re: The concern with security
Once the IoT becomes smart enough, it's all moot. When your house simply recognizes you the way a human guard would, and can figure out that you are being held  at weaponpoint or coerced or deceived into letting a possibly dangerous stranger come in with you, and can respond accordingly, hacking won't be such a worry (since the door will have many anti-hacking defenses) and the physical part can be in a hardened doorframe, where the bad guys would really have to get out the hacksaws and dynamite to go after it.

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JohnBarnes
JohnBarnes
3/29/2016 7:26:01 AM
User Rank
Platinum
About the "progress" in "analytics"
In the last section of this very interesting piece, Bartolomeo seems to lay out a pathway of progress from descriptive through predictive to prescriptive analytics. I suspect that's because he's often talking to investors (and journalists!) who love a good progress narrative. But progress in an intellectual area like data analytics doesn't happen in the way that is implied, with descriptive analytics becoming better until they burst their bonds to become predictive and then eventually surge on to become prescriptive.  Data analytics are not a set of ladder rungs to be climbed, but more like the legs of a three legged stool.

As descriptive analytics becomes better, reverse-GIGO makes the predictions closer to reality, so that even without advances specificaly in predictive analytics, the predictions are more trustworthy. As that happens, those more-reliable predictions make the "if you do--->then you get" that underlies prescriptive analytics much more reliable as well.  But all three were there from the beginning or they wouldn't be there at all. Descriptive analytics is your accountant telling you you're broke and about to be bankrupt; predictive analytics is telling you how soon you'll be bankrupt and how much beter things will be if you change what you're doing; and prescriptive analytics is solving the prediction table or equations to find the course of action that runs the least risk of bankruptcy, the greatest chance of becoming rich, or (more likely) the thing that balances those opportunities and risks most in accord with your values (which presumably is a scale running from "Whooopie!" to providing for your great-grandchildren to go to Harvard).

You wouldn't hire your accountant just to tell you you're broke (you might know already and anyway you'd find out soon enough); you want them to tell you what's going to happen and how to get the best outcome. You also wouldn't hire an accountant who only told you the "right thing" to do without looking at your books. There's an interdependency in all three branches of analytics, and they progress together, not separately, even if we usually build from the descriptive side first.

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dlr5288
dlr5288
3/29/2016 1:53:11 PM
User Rank
Platinum
Re: The concern with security
I remember being in school and talking about the new devices coming out, maybe a few years ago. Someone mentioned security risks and honestly I thought it could never happen. Obviously I was very wrong. It's scary to think about all that can happen if someone can hack into your computer, phone, etc.

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Joe Stanganelli
Joe Stanganelli
3/30/2016 8:58:29 AM
User Rank
Author
Re: The concern with security
I think that teaching kids and encouraging their learning about cybersecurity and hacking will no more or less likely lead them to become black-hat hackers than will teaching teenagers how to drive turn them into car thieves.

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Joe Stanganelli
Joe Stanganelli
3/30/2016 9:00:01 AM
User Rank
Author
Re: The concern with security
@faryl: Reminds me of The Net coming out more than 20 years ago (that Sandra Bullock film), in which EVERYTHING was hackable.  My best friend and I laughed our butts off at how ridiculous that movie was (in 1995, mind you).

Now, it's not so far-fetched at all.

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Joe Stanganelli
Joe Stanganelli
3/30/2016 9:31:20 AM
User Rank
Author
Re: The concern with security
@JohnBarnes: Reminds me of that mechanophore-based plastic that hardens and becomes stronger if it is stretched, torn, or otherwise "damaged"/abused.  (link)

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Alison
Alison
3/30/2016 10:10:34 AM
User Rank
Silver
Re: The concern with security
That's a great point, John. We keep acting and thiknkng as if everything around us will stay the same - other than hackers will get smarter. What's also true is that IoT will become smarter and it will get more challenging for hackers to mimic us, far beyond today's fingerprint or iris scans. With that in mind, the pictures of future IoT security solutions are rosier.

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ms.akkineni
ms.akkineni
3/30/2016 11:06:28 AM
User Rank
Platinum
Re: The concern with security
Good Analogy and I agree.

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ms.akkineni
ms.akkineni
3/30/2016 11:13:24 AM
User Rank
Platinum
Re: The concern with security
@faryl: You are absolutely right.

Connecting  devices via bluetooth / use of computer systems in cars have become kind of bare minimum requirement at this smart age. I recall hearing in news there were occurances where couple of major company cars getting a very poor rateing (or evn degraded?) by consumers. The only reason was - those cars lack smartability features as compared to others. The cars were absolutely fine at the core. So that explains where it is heading to.

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