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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Business origins - MalWareBytes - interesting read Post 303037136 by Neo on Wednesday 24th of July 2019 12:25:20 PM
Old 07-24-2019
Yeah, so as a long time cyber security person, I have never been impressed with companies like MalwareBytes who profit off the insecurity of Windows.

I'm not accusing any company of wrong doings, but there have been many scenarios in circles of cyber security professionals where antivirus companies conspire (or work) with malware creators to have malware released into the wild and for "an antivirus company" to already have an antiviral update(s) ready.

The entire ecosystem is broken; so personally, I am not impressed with the MalwareBytes story. I do not trust any of these companies, since they are not accountable and transparent to the public.

The real "success story" would be for governments or regulators to mandate that these software companies secure their products and be responsible for consumer losses and damages, or to otherwise regulate these greedy high tech companies who are only concerned with quarterly profit reports to their stockholders. Ditto for the new breed of information brokers like FB.

The entire cybersecurity industry is a "self-licking ice cream cone", where the more malware there is, the more money anti-malware companies make. It's really dystopian.

Soon (not sure the exact time), it will be the same in AI. There will be an entire industry built around securing us from AI, hackers attacking AI, AI gone bad, etc. It's really a dystopian future where tech creates more software which needs "protectors" to protect us from the harm it will do. Meanwhile, the huge tech giants get richer, the land costs rise in high tech areas, etc.

It's corporate greed out of control, really.
 

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Business::ISBN::Data(3) 				User Contributed Perl Documentation				   Business::ISBN::Data(3)

NAME
Business::ISBN::Data - data pack for Business::ISBN SYNOPSIS
see Business::ISBN DESCRIPTION
You don't need to load this module yourself in most cases. "Business::ISBN" will load it when it loads. These data are generated from the RangeMessage.xml file provided by the ISBN Agency. You can retrieve this yourself at <http://www.isbn-international.org/agency?rmxml=1>. This file is included as part of the distribution and should be installed at ~lib/Business/ISBN/RangeMessage.xml. If you want to use a different RangeMessage.xml file, you can set the "ISBN_RANGE_MESSAGE" environment variable to the alternate location before you load "Business::ISBN". This way, you can use the latest (or even earlier) data without having to install something new or wait for an update to this module. If the default RangeMessage.xml or your alternate one is not available, the module falls back to data included in Data.pm. However, that data is likely to be older data. The data are in %Business::ISBN::country_data (although the "country" part is historical). If you want to see where the data are from, check $Business::ISBN::country_data{_source}. SOURCE AVAILABILITY
This module lives in the Github repository with Business::ISBN: git://github.com/briandfoy/business--isbn.git If you have something to add, create a fork on Github and send a pull request. AUTHOR
brian d foy, "<bdfoy@cpan.org>" Yakov Shafranovich updated the data in October 2008. Daniel Jakubik updated the data in July 2012. COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (c) 2002-2012, brian d foy, All Rights Reserved. You may redistribute this under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.16.3 2012-07-26 Business::ISBN::Data(3)
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