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According to a new report, tech giants like Amazon and Alexa are allegedly spying on us with their smart home devices. Who would have thought that devices designed to spy on us are spying on us?
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We’re pleased to announce that starting in August 2024, developers who are not part of an organization managed by an IT administrator can choose to receive monthly Visual Studio security updates through the Microsoft Update (MU) system on “patch Tuesdays”. We dare you
Yes, I've reported on it in the past. But this one includes the Registry key to shut it off.
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New global research from secure storage maker Apricorn into the security and storage of data finds corporate information is knowingly put at risk by 55 percent of mobile workers. *Workers* put corporate data at risk. The remote ones just do it in their pyjamas
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ExectOS is a preemptive, reentrant multitasking operating system that implements the XT architecture which derives from NT™ architecture. Is this The Year of ExectOS?
Getting in before the official declaration
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The Biden administration on Thursday will announce plans to bar the sale of antivirus software made by Russia's Kaspersky Labs in the United States, a person familiar with the matter said, citing the firm's large U.S. customers including critical infrastructure providers and state and local governments. Anti-anti-virus
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Two veteran astronauts will extend their stay on the International Space Station as teams on the ground work to better understand issues with the Boeing-built spacecraft that carried them to orbit. What has trouble going up, has trouble coming down
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Artificial intelligence-generated comedy still reportedly requires humans, as it remains a struggle to write comedic content independently, as revealed by a new Google Deepmind study. As I demonstrate daily
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WeAreDevelopers have published the results of their survey on tech recruiting. And 100% would just like the cheque
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If you are not using random, computer-generated passwords, or one of the best password generators, chances are your logins can be cracked within an hour, research has warned. So don't bother using a hard one - they'll never expect you to use an easy one!
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The vulnerability could let hackers gain access to your PC on public Wi-Fi networks. WiFi? More like WiFuuuuuuuuu
It does read like they'd have to be on the same router (which would be the case in a coffee shop etc. anyway)
According to the CVSS metric, the attack vector is adjacent (AV:A). What does that mean for this vulnerability?
Exploiting this vulnerability requires an attacker to be within proximity of the target system to send and receive radio transmissions.
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Recently, both .NET Upgrade Assistant and Azure Migrate application and code assessment for .NET have had updates improving privacy and security as well as adding some useful new features. Sadly, they don't modernize your privacy and security code
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Kahn had a communications perspective, Cerf came with a computing perspective, and together they worked on connecting diverse computing networks — up to 256 of them. But what have they done for us lately?
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A researcher has found a bug that allows anyone to impersonate Microsoft corporate email accounts, making phishing attempts look credible and more likely to trick their targets. Good thing they never email anyone
"The bug, according to Kokorin, only works when sending the email to Outlook accounts." <-- Oh, phew. Good thing no one uses those.
/sigh... Microsoft...
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Did something change? I was of the impression you could forge email headers all you wanted so long as you controlled the SMTP sending the mail?
I've sent prank mail from Gates and such. From .NET it was as simple as changing the FROM: to whatever you want.
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I suspect this bug allows you to spoof the entire header, including the routing and source mail server information. Changing the "FROM" information doesn't change the source email server information.
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Huh. I thought most of them use GMail…
Time is the differentiation of eternity devised by man to measure the passage of human events.
- Manly P. Hall
Mark
Just another cog in the wheel
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The company has now confirmed an issue with the Photos app wherein the application would fail to start due to a conflict with a non-admin-based group policy or CSP (configuration service provider) policy. You don't own any software, Photos Edition
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A colleague told a story of how he once broke the entire Office division’s ability to check in code because he accidentally checked in a syntax error to the script that is used to verify that your proposed change has satisfied all the pre-submit requirements such as passing static analysis and unit testing. Hoist on your own Autocorrect
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Too bad they fixed it. We wouldn't have been subjected to "New Outlook" if they hadn't.
I’ve given up trying to be calm. However, I am open to feeling slightly less agitated.
I’m begging you for the benefit of everyone, don’t be STUPID.
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That's what they get for writing their code in MS-Word.
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1994’s Simon was the first rough draft of a device that would change the world. But it was also a dead end. It's just not like IBM to mess up and lose an early lead
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A little more than ten years later Microsoft completely bungles the handheld market.
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They did find two scenarios in which human-driven cars were safer: at dawn/dusk and when turning. Going forward and going in reverse?
But (more) seriously folks - hearing they're less safe when turning does not give me confidence in them.
I also would really like to see some numbers for autonomous driving when the road markings are not clearly visible (aka winter driving, or even spring with the sand on the side of the road)
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Dawn/dusk - Autonomous vehicles need sunglasses and clean sensors. These are the two biggest problems when the sun is low in the sky.
I suspect Tesla's FSD, which is the only non-geofenced system on the road today, would pass the driving test in most jurisdictions.
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A free & open-source OpenTelemetry dashboard for deep insights into your apps on your local development machine. Big You is always watching
No idea why that quote came to mind today... ;S
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