EMMYdiocracy

Ask & Suggest   Full Tag List   

Mediocracy is a situation which can occur in a democracy in which mediocre people prevail. The society is then subordinated to a quasi-egalitarian ideology in which words and ideas are redefined by mediocre people, to be convenient for mediocre people. Russian novelist Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn was a frequent critic of mediocracy in contemporary Western countries. || This where the tag cloud goes if the tag cloud loads:

  • theatlantic:

Economists: Cybercrime Estimates Are Wildly, Ridiculously Overblown

Estimates of cybercrime tend to be huge. Really, really huge. A recent study pegged the losses from cybercrime to companies at one trillion dollars. By comparison, the entire illegal global drug trade may total out a few hundred billion dollars, according to the UN. So, what cybercrime studies are saying is that the cybercrime market is several times larger than all the cocaine, heroin, meth, and pot sold across the entire globe.
These estimates strain credulity. Could cybercrime really be such a big deal? But put the word cyber before anything and everything goes haywire: Cyberwar! Cybersecurity! Cyberblinders! We all know the Internet is a big deal, so therefore crime on the Internet must be a big deal, right? 
Well, finally, two economists, Dinei Florencio and Cormac Herley, came along to think about these supposed cybercrime harm estimates. What did they find? I’ll let them tell you, via their editorial in the New York Times:
It turns out, however, that such widely circulated cybercrime estimates are generated using absurdly bad statistical methods, making them wholly unreliable. Most cybercrime estimates are based on surveys of consumers and companies. They borrow credibility from election polls, which we have learned to trust. However, when extrapolating from a surveyed group to the overall population, there is an enormous difference between preference questions (which are used in election polls) and numerical questions (as in cybercrime surveys).
Read more. [Image: Alexis Madrigal/Reuters]

thats a p neat desktop you got there tho. franklins and grants all splayed out like you just don’t curr

    theatlantic:

    Economists: Cybercrime Estimates Are Wildly, Ridiculously Overblown

    Estimates of cybercrime tend to be huge. Really, really huge. A recent study pegged the losses from cybercrime to companies at one trillion dollars. By comparison, the entire illegal global drug trade may total out a few hundred billion dollars, according to the UN. So, what cybercrime studies are saying is that the cybercrime market is several times larger than all the cocaine, heroin, meth, and pot sold across the entire globe.

    These estimates strain credulity. Could cybercrime really be such a big deal? But put the word cyber before anything and everything goes haywire: Cyberwar! Cybersecurity! Cyberblinders! We all know the Internet is a big deal, so therefore crime on the Internet must be a big deal, right? 

    Well, finally, two economists, Dinei Florencio and Cormac Herley, came along to think about these supposed cybercrime harm estimates. What did they find? I’ll let them tell you, via their editorial in the New York Times:

    It turns out, however, that such widely circulated cybercrime estimates are generated using absurdly bad statistical methods, making them wholly unreliable. Most cybercrime estimates are based on surveys of consumers and companies. They borrow credibility from election polls, which we have learned to trust. However, when extrapolating from a surveyed group to the overall population, there is an enormous difference between preference questions (which are used in election polls) and numerical questions (as in cybercrime surveys).
    Read more. [Image: Alexis Madrigal/Reuters]

    thats a p neat desktop you got there tho. franklins and grants all splayed out like you just don’t curr

    (via socialuprooting)

    — 1 year ago with 75 notes
    #internet  #holla holla get $ 
    1. knightworg reblogged this from theatlantic
    2. lotsoloot reblogged this from theatlantic
    3. asongagainstsex reblogged this from theatlantic
    4. leftistshuffle reblogged this from silas216 and added:
      Economists: Cybercrime Estimates Are Wildly, Ridiculously Overblown Estimates of cybercrime tend to be huge. Really,...
    5. contemplatingmadness reblogged this from logicianmagician
    6. shychemist reblogged this from logicianmagician
    7. logicianmagician reblogged this from theatlantic
    8. extracrispy reblogged this from theatlantic
    9. cableknit-knight reblogged this from theatlantic
    10. turntablefuneral reblogged this from theatlantic
    11. anteco reblogged this from theatlantic
    12. writingcapital reblogged this from theatlantic
    13. rav3nus reblogged this from socialuprooting
    14. wizardblue reblogged this from theatlantic
    15. silas216 reblogged this from theatlantic
    16. down-with-the-bureaucracy reblogged this from theatlantic
    17. wittystatementhere reblogged this from theatlantic
    18. shwuang reblogged this from theatlantic
    19. whenimreallyathundacat reblogged this from theatlantic
    20. letslook4treasure reblogged this from theatlantic
    21. This was featured in #Tech