So when did "Actors" become the new buzz word?


Recommended Posts

This is a useless thread, I know.

 

I swear I never heard of this term until the last couple of weeks. Who started it, and does annoy you as much as it does me? I don't know why it irks me, it just does :laugh:

 

"State sponsored actors."

 

"This malware allows threat actors to infiltrate a user's network environment."

 

It just has this politically correct ring to it.

 

1 minute ago, slamfire92 said:

This is a useless thread, I know.

 

I swear I never heard of this term until the last couple of weeks. Who started it, and does annoy you as much as it does me? I don't know why it irks me, it just does :laugh:

 

"State sponsored actors."

 

"This malware allows threat actors to infiltrate a user's network environment."

 

It just has this politically correct ring to it.

 

It's in the dictionary so a while ago I'd wager.  

3 minutes ago, Torolol said:

why its 'Actors' and not 'Agents'?

ac·tor

ˈaktər/

noun

a person whose profession is acting on the stage, in movies, or on television.

synonyms:performer, player, thespian, trouper; More

a person who behaves in a way that is not genuine.

"in war one must be a good actor"

a participant in an action or process.

"employers are key actors within industrial relations"

3 minutes ago, adrynalyne said:

a person who behaves in a way that is not genuine.

pretty much what they doing are genuine, executing any hidden agenda/instructions/orders such as sabotaging, spying, infiltration, etc..,

so they can't be 'actors' in buzz-words sense.

Just now, Torolol said:

pretty much what they doing are genuine, executing any hidden agenda/instructions/orders such as sabotaging, spying, infiltration, etc..,

so they can't be 'actors' in buzz-words sense.

You know, I underlined what I was referring to...

^ yeah.. I am with hawkman here, which is not always the case ;) heheh But use of that term has been use for long long time...   That has always been the definition of the word, so it has always been used in that fashion.  It describes someone that is a participant in something

 

adrynalyne underlined the appropriate definition for use of the word in this sense

 

a participant in an action or process.

 

Not sure where you would of gotten that it is a "buzz" word - when talking about state sponsored malware, yeah the state sponsored is now becoming more widely used.  Back a few years when the internet was new.. Ah the good old days without spam, etc.  And there really wasn't malware/worms/etc who would of thought that a government would be involved in their writing such code, etc. 

Look at it this way, when a company uses that term it's a deflection tactic, it's meant to give them an out for shoddy or nonexistent security in their environment, so using the term actors is correct because the "actor" is meant to distract form reality 

13 minutes ago, Anibal P said:

Look at it this way, when a company uses that term it's a deflection tactic, it's meant to give them an out for shoddy or nonexistent security in their environment, so using the term actors is correct because the "actor" is meant to distract form reality 

eh, no. it's standard terminology on software development, QA and documentation.

So is it the people not getting the definition of the term Actor not native english speakers?  Is that what it is?  While hawkman's english is top notch, and might even be a native speaker?  But you can see from his location not in US, and pretty sure he is not an expat.  So he gets it, why are you others having issues with the definition of a word?

On 10/1/2016 at 2:52 PM, adrynalyne said:

You know, I underlined what I was referring to...

 

Ya see, that is where you went wrong, mate. You need to bold, underline, increase font size, and change the colour to red. Only then will people see what you are referring to. /s

 

 

6 hours ago, BudMan said:

So is it the people not getting the definition of the term Actor not native english speakers?  Is that what it is?  While hawkman's english is top notch, and might even be a native speaker?  But you can see from his location not in US, and pretty sure he is not an expat.  So he gets it, why are you others having issues with the definition of a word?

Scandinavia is pretty good with english education in schools. also I have had higher education in programming and projects, so I might have an unfair advantage in knowing the usage of the word in system and software. 

"Scandinavia is pretty good with english education in schools."

 

If your english is an indication I would say yeah! ;)  Guess you deal with native speakers, or all use it all the time work/friends?  Or just online? Did you spend any time in native english speaking country? School maybe?

 

I deal with many non native speakers for work, and spend lots of personal time with some of them (beers after work, etc).  Mostly German, Spanish (Mexico and from Spain), French, etc.  Picking up on the multiple definitions of a word and its different definitions based upon context and its proper use is skill picked up after many years of speaking.  There is one thing to know the multiple definitions of a word, there is another in determining the specific definition from the context or understanding that the word must have multiple definitions when used in specific context.  Vocabulary is not only the number of words you know, its the proper use and understanding of the same words as they are used in specific context.

 

While its true that your technical background might have given you exposure to this example of the use of this word.  Maybe it's just you have a higher education level overall that has provided you with exposure to richer vocabulary use, or use and experience has increased your overall vocabulary above the OP or others that are not getting this context?  I am with agreement that this nothing new how this word is used, Players/Actors/Contributors all could be used in such context based upon the exact wording used.

17 hours ago, HawkMan said:

Scandinavia is pretty good with english education in schools. 

Sorry to go OT, but from what I understand about your school systems you do a pretty amazing job overall. I wish I could say the same about my own country.

39 minutes ago, BudMan said:

"Scandinavia is pretty good with english education in schools."

 

If your english is an indication I would say yeah! ;)  Guess you deal with native speakers, or all use it all the time work/friends?  Or just online? Did you spend any time in native english speaking country? School maybe?

No, but I was a computer kid ;) and I preferred reading books in the english they where written in.

 

I have worked at a call center with Danish and Finnish people though.  The danish you can't understand when they speak their gibberish that's supposed to be practically the same language, why do they stuff that potato down their throat every morning... and the finns... well they just plain refuse to speak swedish even though they all learn it in school and can speak swedish just fine... there's some anger issues there from way back :)

13 minutes ago, compl3x said:

Sorry to go OT, but from what I understand about your school systems you do a pretty amazing job overall. I wish I could say the same about my own country.

Pretty good, but there's definite issue and from what I understand we're struggling with the math levels and science stuff at least, in some of the education studies compared to the countries around the world with better education results. So far the current governments solution is to demand that all teacher need near top grades from teacher university in all the major classes they started with math, and Norwegian(which is more more about old writers and boring books anyway, and analyzing stuff instead of enjoying reading) and english is next.  this ignores the problem that they're get teachers with good theoretical knowledge in all classes but few that are actually good teachers.

Hello,

 

Within the past decade... maybe 7-8 years ago?  I suspect it is a term initially used by intelligence/military/defense contractors that has made it's way over to the commercial anti-malware space.  Other buzzword bingo terms include "military-grade," "nation-state," and cyber-as-a-prefix to anything, to name a few.

Regards,

Aryeh Goretsky

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Speaking of right, right dominant only which, as with most, makes this meaningless to me.
    • No, size is not the only selling point. I did not even remotely say that. Your claim was that "building your own will be faster and cheaper". This is false. You cannot build something close to that form factor with off-the-shelf parts. You can build a Mini-ITX PC and pay more, or something larger and pay less. But these are different market segments. It's apples and oranges.
    • There is a default resolution setting in Settings > Display that can be changed with a click. You can also change the settings on a per-game basis. No CLI needed. Also, Steam has countless games that are not "[perpetual] alpha/beta games", so no need for the straw man. Plus you can use other stores as well. And console games (e.g. PS5) cost a fortune, which itself more than negates the price subsidy on the system, unless you plan on exclusively playing 1 or 2 games. It's true that you shouldn't buy a system that doesn't support the game(s) you want to play, but I think that's kinda obvious, and applies to every console as well as PC. I don't game in the living room and have no need of a Steam Machine, but there is a clear market segment that would find it useful.
    • RSS Guard 5.2.0 by Razvan Serea RSS Guard is a simple (yet powerful) feed reader. It is able to fetch the most known feed formats, including RSS/RDF and ATOM. It's free, it's open-source. RSS Guard currently supports Czech, Dutch, English, French, German, Italian. RSS Guard will never depend on other services - this includes online news aggregators like Feedly, The Old Reader and others. RSS Guard is developed on top of the Qt library and it supports these operating systems: Windows GNU/Linux OS/2 (eComStation) Mac OS X xBSD (possibly) Android (possibly) other platforms supported by Qt The core features of RSS Guard are: support for online feed synchronization via plugins, Tiny Tiny RSS (from RSS Guard 3.0.0). multiplatform, support for all feed formats, simplicity, import/export of feeds to/from OPML 2.0, downloader with own tab and support for up to 6 parallel downloads, message filter with regular expressions, feed metadata fetching including icons, simple Adblock functionality, customized popup notifications, Google-based auto-completion for internal web browser location bar, ability to cleanup internal message database with various options, enhanced feed auto-updating with separate time intervals, multiple data backend support, SQLite (in-memory DBs too), MySQL. is able to specify target database by its name (MySQL backend), “portable” mode support with clever auto-detection, feed categorization, drap-n-drop for feed list, automatic checking for updates, ability to discover existing feeds on websites, full support of podcasts (both RSS & ATOM), ability to backup/restore database or settings, fully-featured recycle bin, printing of messages and any web pages, can be fully controlled via keyboard, feed authentication (Digest-MD5, BASIC, NTLM-2), handles tons of messages & feeds, sweet look & feel, fully adjustable toolbars (changeable buttons and style), ability to check for updates on all platforms + self-updating on Windows, hideable main menu, toolbars and list headers, KFeanza-based default icon theme + ability to create your own icon themes, fully skinnable user interface + ability to create your own skins, “newspaper” view, plenty of skins, support for "feed://" URI scheme, ability to hide list of feeds/categories, open-source development model based on GNU GPL license, version 3, tabbed interface, integrated web browser with adjustable behavior + external browser support, internal web browser mouse gestures support, desktop integration via tray icon, localizations to some languages, Qt library is the only dependency, open-source development model and friendly author waiting for your feedback, no ads, no hidden costs. RSS Guard 5.2.0 changelog: Added: Feed auto-fetch can now also be delayed while Feral GameMode is active on Linux and startup auto-fetch is skipped when GameMode is already active. (#2265) WebEngine builds can now use RSS Guard generated proxy auto-config (PAC) rules so article/web browsing follows per-account and per-feed proxy settings more closely. (#2273) Generated PAC rules now also cover related subdomains and use Public Suffix List data, so feeds such as feeds.bbc.co.uk can also proxy resources from images.bbc.co.uk. (#2273) Standard feeds can now define extra proxy domains, useful when article images, stylesheets or other page resources are loaded from a CDN or another domain that should use the same feed proxy. (#2273) RSS Guard now asks for proxy credentials when a WebEngine page needs proxy authentication and can fill credentials from the current feed proxy when available. (#2273) Network settings again include an option to ignore all cookies, which clears stored cookies and prevents new cookies from being accepted. Standard RSS/ATOM feeds can now individually ignore cookies while downloading feed data. Stored cookies can now be deleted from the Tools menu. Custom skin colors can now override the feed list article count color separately from feed titles, including a separate highlighted color. (#2275) Settings dialog can now search across available settings and highlight matching controls. (#1754) Standard RSS/ATOM feeds can now optionally be reported as broken when they are valid but contain no articles. (#2039) Standard RSS/ATOM feeds can now override the application-wide feed connection timeout per feed. (#1023) Tray icon can now use a custom background color and unread-count text color, with an option to reuse the generated icon as the application icon. (#1973) Support for more benevolent parsing of Gemlog entries (#2295). Article list can now show when an article was received by RSS Guard. (#947) Feed deep discovery now actually scrapes all links found in the website and checks if they are feeds or not. This greatly enhances usability of the deep discovery mode and discovers many more feeds than before. (#2306) Search boxes now show a small dot when the feed or article list is hiding some items because of active filtering. (#873) Articles now have a shortcut-assignable action to open the homepage of the feed they belong to. (#2060) Fixed: Parallel feed updates no longer crash when multiple update results are processed at the same time. (64cf521) Links in WebEngine articles opened from feeds such as Kill the Newsletter now open correctly instead of being swallowed by the embedded page. (#2272) Relative article URLs resolution was kinda broken. (#2282) Clicking article URL did not work when the URL had "fragment" set. (#2293) The default proxy setting now uses Qt/system default proxy behavior instead of forcing no proxy. (e0263ad) WebEngine article loading now keeps the current feed context, so feed-specific proxy credentials remain available while the article page loads. (fdd0f00) Download: RSS Guard 5.2.0 (64-bit) | Portable | ~ 130.0 MB (Open Source) Link: RSS Guard Home Page | Other Operating Systems | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
  • Recent Achievements

    • Rookie
      DaviKar went up a rank
      Rookie
    • Dedicated
      HidekoYamamoto94 earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • One Month Later
      timbobit earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      nates earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Almohandis earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      461
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      161
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      110
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      83
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      69
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!