Let me support your argument by telling you what you just reminded me of... I was briefly subscribed to the NYT from Germany. To my surprise, I couldn't cancel online, but had to call. (The EU has a law which requires…
I'm conflicted on the use of AI in CTFs. On the one hand, they are supposed to mirror real-life scenarios, so of course you should be able to use any tool that would be available to you in real life. On the other hand,…
The deal is in contrast to Anthropic and OpenAI who wanted additional restrictions regarding the use of their models for autonomous weapon control and domestic mass surveillance. The US government agreed to these terms…
If QC gets to the point where breaking RSA and ECC in the real world is actually going to happen, I'd imagine you will find a consensus rather quickly.
Ok, fair point. However, I would consider any MDM-enabled device fully "compromised" in the sense that the org can see and modify everything I do on it.
The argument regarding no certificate pinning seems to miss that just because I might be on a network that MITM's TLS traffic doesn't mean my device trusts the random CA used by the proxy. I'd just get a TLS error,…
Bubblewrap is exactly what the Claude sandbox uses. > These restrictions are enforced at the OS level (Seatbelt on macOS, bubblewrap on Linux), so they apply to all subprocess commands, including tools like kubectl,…
> This would only apply if they were distributing the GPL licensed code alongside their own code. As far as I understand the FSF's interpretation of their license, that's not true. Even if you only dynamically link to…
I fully agree. The original comment and the other replies to it are bewildering. There was nothing to gain here, yet people are throwing ad hominem attacks left and right.
Firefox on Android seems to be unaffected.
The next paragraph also reads... > However, The Guardian reported that Lidden’s solicitor, John Sutton, had criticised the Border Force for how it had handled the incident, describing it as a ‘massive over-reaction’…
In addition to the other comments: If you are on NixOS, you can use nixos-enter [1]. [1] https://wiki.nixos.org/wiki/Change_root
At least for the "to the right" part, I think the monotonicity of time has that one covered unless someone invents a time machine to improve metrics in the past.
FYI, assuming that is your web server, your TLS certificate expired end of last month.
Personally, I like a lot of things about NixOS. Redeploying a machine has never been easier for me as all of my config is stored in a git repo in a few .nix files. I don't need to remember what I installed or configured…
Sounds like what you have is similar to the idea of a bastion host, even if not quite the same.
> Now an old fashioned light bulb shouldn't be expected to last a decade, but an oven? Funnily enough, there actually was the Phoebus cartel [1] which sought to reduce the lifespan of incandescent light bulbs to around…
Mastodon is decentralized / federated, so the page load time depends on the instance you're visiting.
Only 2 left, probably for a while already. I'd guess that's old stock.
> What if they don't have packages you need? Unlikely. But if so, you can provide the packages yourself: https://info.arxiv.org/help/submit_tex.html#wegotem > What if your paper isn't written with LaTeX? Then they still…
The tweet was updated five minutes later to correct 550 to 505. https://twitter.com/karaswisher/status/1726599700961521762?s...
This still has nothing to do with the ImageMagick developers, which the original comment implies: "Compare [sic] to codesign, vulnerability management is more concerning." You are free to criticize Canonical for their…
What does this have to do with ImageMagick? They don't control the versions packaged by Canonical [0]. The bug you referenced is fixed in upstream, which you can access for free on GitHub. Ubuntu users on 22.04 LTS or…
As someone who played the "The Room" series, including the VR title, this looks really interesting to me. Could you maybe share if the game features any jumpscares?
All of the current methods to bypass internet access, account creation, CPU/TPM requirements, etc. (including the linked article) depend on the cooperation of the OS.
Let me support your argument by telling you what you just reminded me of... I was briefly subscribed to the NYT from Germany. To my surprise, I couldn't cancel online, but had to call. (The EU has a law which requires…
I'm conflicted on the use of AI in CTFs. On the one hand, they are supposed to mirror real-life scenarios, so of course you should be able to use any tool that would be available to you in real life. On the other hand,…
The deal is in contrast to Anthropic and OpenAI who wanted additional restrictions regarding the use of their models for autonomous weapon control and domestic mass surveillance. The US government agreed to these terms…
If QC gets to the point where breaking RSA and ECC in the real world is actually going to happen, I'd imagine you will find a consensus rather quickly.
Ok, fair point. However, I would consider any MDM-enabled device fully "compromised" in the sense that the org can see and modify everything I do on it.
The argument regarding no certificate pinning seems to miss that just because I might be on a network that MITM's TLS traffic doesn't mean my device trusts the random CA used by the proxy. I'd just get a TLS error,…
Bubblewrap is exactly what the Claude sandbox uses. > These restrictions are enforced at the OS level (Seatbelt on macOS, bubblewrap on Linux), so they apply to all subprocess commands, including tools like kubectl,…
> This would only apply if they were distributing the GPL licensed code alongside their own code. As far as I understand the FSF's interpretation of their license, that's not true. Even if you only dynamically link to…
I fully agree. The original comment and the other replies to it are bewildering. There was nothing to gain here, yet people are throwing ad hominem attacks left and right.
Firefox on Android seems to be unaffected.
The next paragraph also reads... > However, The Guardian reported that Lidden’s solicitor, John Sutton, had criticised the Border Force for how it had handled the incident, describing it as a ‘massive over-reaction’…
In addition to the other comments: If you are on NixOS, you can use nixos-enter [1]. [1] https://wiki.nixos.org/wiki/Change_root
At least for the "to the right" part, I think the monotonicity of time has that one covered unless someone invents a time machine to improve metrics in the past.
FYI, assuming that is your web server, your TLS certificate expired end of last month.
Personally, I like a lot of things about NixOS. Redeploying a machine has never been easier for me as all of my config is stored in a git repo in a few .nix files. I don't need to remember what I installed or configured…
Sounds like what you have is similar to the idea of a bastion host, even if not quite the same.
> Now an old fashioned light bulb shouldn't be expected to last a decade, but an oven? Funnily enough, there actually was the Phoebus cartel [1] which sought to reduce the lifespan of incandescent light bulbs to around…
Mastodon is decentralized / federated, so the page load time depends on the instance you're visiting.
Only 2 left, probably for a while already. I'd guess that's old stock.
> What if they don't have packages you need? Unlikely. But if so, you can provide the packages yourself: https://info.arxiv.org/help/submit_tex.html#wegotem > What if your paper isn't written with LaTeX? Then they still…
The tweet was updated five minutes later to correct 550 to 505. https://twitter.com/karaswisher/status/1726599700961521762?s...
This still has nothing to do with the ImageMagick developers, which the original comment implies: "Compare [sic] to codesign, vulnerability management is more concerning." You are free to criticize Canonical for their…
What does this have to do with ImageMagick? They don't control the versions packaged by Canonical [0]. The bug you referenced is fixed in upstream, which you can access for free on GitHub. Ubuntu users on 22.04 LTS or…
As someone who played the "The Room" series, including the VR title, this looks really interesting to me. Could you maybe share if the game features any jumpscares?
All of the current methods to bypass internet access, account creation, CPU/TPM requirements, etc. (including the linked article) depend on the cooperation of the OS.