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"I'm interested in all kinds of astronomy."
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@pervognsen Did u see that the RAD Debugger has been released :O ? https://github.com/EpicGames/raddebugger

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"OpenAI says it’s “impossible” to create useful AI models without copyrighted material"

10 years ago three dudes from Sweden were hunted by FBI, Interpol and their own government for challenging copyright laws and seeking a fresh approach without ever profiting from it. 🏴‍☠️

Now venture capitalist-backed corporations will sell us our own copyrighted material at a premium. Working tirelessly to embed it in every product designed from now on so you will not be able to avoid it. 💰

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So apparently starting with Linux 5.18, ASLR is weakened for 64-bit executables, and absolutely BROKEN (i.e. not present) for 32-bit executables when the library is 2MB or larger.
Oops? 🤦‍♂️
https://zolutal.github.io/aslrnt/

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@yabellini@fosstodon has moved

Did you realize that we live in a reality where SciHub is illegal, and OpenAI is not?

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80 character column limits in code are a legacy from 80 column text displays which are a legacy of IBM's 80 column punch cards which are a legacy of Roman chariots which had two side-by-side 40 column horses

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Edited 1 year ago

has a new hidden setting auto-rejecting banners (not just hiding them eg Brave). Piloting in 🇩🇪 in Private Browsing but anyone can enable:
Go to the URL about:config
Set cookiebanners.ui.desktop.enabled ->True
Go to Settings->Privacy, turn on Cookie Banner Blocker.

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Edited 2 years ago

It's probably obvious to most of you, but a big difference between the commercial social media platforms and the fediverse is that as those commercial platform grow, they get additional revenue from ads, from selling personal information, and otherwise monetizing their users. While that is turning out to not actually pay the bills for them, in the fediverse, just about every instance is run by volunteers and funded by donations or out of the volunteers' pockets. It's a labor of love and a hope for a better future. When traffic grows, we need to expand our capacity.

That is why I am asking, if you are able, please consider donating to the instance you on to help keep the fediverse ecosystem going. Typically the /about web page will have details on how to donate.

Note: I am well aware that many of you are not in a financial position to donate - and that is OK. We are here to serve you as well. Donations are completely optional.

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The first version of an SMTP smuggling scanner is now available at https://github.com/The-Login/SMTP-Smuggling-Tools.
More tools to come! Feedback is much appreciated!

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The 37C3 talk on TEA1 encryption (used by police and military units in europe) is hilarious.
The hackers announced they found a vulnerability in the encryption, and one of the ways the organization that standardized the TEA1 encryption downplayed the breach was by saying that it wasn't viable, because it required "high powered GPUs".

So they ported their algorithm to a Toshiba Satellite P1 running Windows 95, and re-cracked the encryption there.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8KhbJ4pqcOY

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I've only just noticed that GitHub has a "Download SBOM" button on repos, e.g. https://github.com/bbc/simorgh/network/dependencies

It's in SPDX format (https://spdx.github.io/spdx-spec/v2.3/introduction/) which seems pretty reasonable to me from a machine-reading PoV.

Hopefully being a standardised format means it can be ingested into standardised tooling.

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Under-the-radar late night launch: RSS Parrot is live! It talks like Mastodon, but it doesn't walk like Mastodon. BUT! It will relay any RSS feed straight into your timeline.

Turn Mastodon into your very own feed reader. Follow anything that has an RSS feed and get a toot about new posts.

How? Mention @birb with the address you want to follow.

More details at https://rss-parrot.net. Boost for visibility :)

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PSA to all junior hackers: pasting some random code into GPT, asking it to “identify” a security vulnerability, and submitting it as a bug bounty will never, ever work. You will succeed only in getting yourself banlisted as a crank.

You can spend five years becoming an actual expert or you can find a career that’s easier for you; if it were so easy that ChatGPT could do it, there wouldn’t be any bug bounties

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Edited 1 year ago

I highly recommend supporting the Standard Ebooks project. 📚

«Standard Ebooks is a volunteer-driven project that produces new editions of public domain e-books that are lovingly formatted, open source, free of copyright restrictions, and free of cost.»

Donate 👇
https://standardebooks.org/donate

Please boost 🙏

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Okay, listen up:

Mozilla is two different entities. The Mozilla Corporation and the Mozilla Foundation. The second one? That’s the social good one you really want focused on important things.

The Mozilla Foundation, like all non-profits, publishes their Form 990 annually to disclose compensation. Here it is.

You’ll see that the top earner there, Mitchell Baker, who is very handsomely rewarded, is actually paid by the Mozilla Corporation, not the Foundation. Put another way, the non-profit is not blowing its funding on a CEO.

And the corp, by the way, is what generates revenue that largely funds Firefox.

The annual report of the Foundation shows a pretty healthy financial situation, and increased investment in public good projects year-over-year.

I don’t like everything they do either (e.g. that risible website generator), but I don’t actually think they are suffering from a lack of focus. They’re suffering from a mature market.

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@robertatcara As someone who personally discovered and fixed Y2K bugs that would have had significant real world impact, it is disturbing to hear someone propagate this myth [that it was a "big fuss about nothing"]. And it is a myth.

This is what really happened:
https://time.com/5752129/y2k-bug-history/

The testing methodology insured that these impacts were not hypothetical. At my company, the testing was performed by actually rolling the clock forward to test systems to see what would happen. For example, I discovered that every ATM in the state of Alaska operated by my company would have locked up until a PROM chip was swapped. Someone had to fly all over the state to proactively swap the chip beforehand, to avoid significant customer impact.

And that was just one story. I personally oversaw investigation and fixes for other hardware and software at that company that would have failed.

And that was just my company. I spoke with others in IT at that time with similar stories. And that was just the people I knew.

So no, it wasn't "a big fuss about nothing" - and saying so is both dangerously revisionist, and disrespectful of the work it took to prevent real impacts.

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The recording of my "Browsers biggest TLS Mistake" lightning talk at #37C3:
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Edited 1 year ago

I want Firefox to succeed more than ever and I support Mozilla finding better revenue sources than search engine default sales, but I do not support a $7M salary for its CEO.

I canceled my recurring donation to Mozilla because I need that money more than Mozilla’s CEO needs that money.

If there is a direct funding option of developers working on Firefox, I will happily reallocate that money. Send me links.

Source: Form 990 https://stateof.mozilla.org/

Edit: Replaced commentary with direct source

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infosec best practice in 2023: do not use or install any software

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