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In the future, I imagine almost every site will use HTTPS—maybe browsers will even refuse to connect over plain HTTP. Then this kind of attack won't be possible.


I'm sure that there will be free proxies that "require you to install this program" (which also installs a certificate) to work. But yeah, it helps for e.g. the middle schoolers who don't have admin rights on the computers anyway.


I.e. it helps making our broken education system even worse?


This isn't really fair, you can't trust 100s/1000s of children you don't know to look after systems well.


This is called "learning experience". How children are supposed to not think of computers as magic boxes if they're prohibited from doing anything interesting on it (and that very much includes breaking them and fixing by themselves)? Restoring the machines back to original state should be a trivial task for whoever is responsible for the computer room.


    > How children are supposed to not think of
    > computers as magic boxes if they're prohibited
    > from doing anything interesting on it (and that
    > very much includes breaking them and fixing by 
    > themselves)?
The first thing every kid did in the computer lab was highlight all the icons on the desktop and try to delete them. We already knew how to use computers because we had one at home to mess with. The whole goal of the computer lab was to figure out how to create a bomb for the next user.

Now pretend we aren't in the heights or mid/upper burbs anymore. There is no IT/networking staff. It's just Mr. Perkins, the English teacher that volunteered to look after the computer room. And there are kids without computers in their household. Too bad, all the computers are hosed because lol.




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