I bought and plugged Echo in tonight
And she hears every whisper of each quiet conversation
She streams a song, then books a flight
Her LEDs reflect the stars that guide me toward salvation
I stopped an old man along the way
Hoping to find some old forgotten words to reclaim privacy
He turned to me as if to say
"Foolish boy, it's listening to you!"
OK everyone, time to reset your face and fingerprint. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2019/aug/14/major-breach-found-in-biometrics-system-used-by-banks-uk-police-and-defence-firms
@cwt I don't believe so, as you do not own the copyright
After decades of suffering through ipchains/iptables syntax, and seeing how easy fw and ufw made common firewall workflows, it's disappointing that the best Debian's iptables replacement can do is:
nft add rule inet filter input tcp dport 22 accept
When syntax for common workflows is complicated, you increase the chance the admin will make a mistake that exposes them to attackers. See S3 bucket permissions for more examples of this. #infosec #devops
@darthwayne Awesome!
@timhildred @linuxjournal Exploring options, but I love the feel of a real book.
I can't speak for the rest of the @linuxjournal archive, but I own the decade+ worth of articles I wrote. A lot of them are just as relevant today (I refer to them myself quite often). Would anyone be interested in some kind of "Best of Hack and /" polished and updated compilation?
The Register covered my article announcing @linuxjournal closing and included a number of quotes from my first goodbye that add extra context. https://www.theregister.co.uk/AMP/2019/08/08/linux_journal_closes_again_editor_says_os_buried_under_proprietary_software/
A "verification" system tying each battery to a specific phone is a huge blow to your ability to repair your own devices. https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/59nz3k/apple-is-locking-batteries-to-specific-iphones-a-nightmare-for-diy-repair
@lufthans For peat's sake!
@kyle For me, I want to thank you for the past year of Linux Journal, which I only rediscovered last September. Best wishes to you and the rest. And good luck with the Librem 5. I hope for its success.
Well, this sucks. Linux Journal is no more (again).
Hopefully the website stays around as it has some really good content.
Sorry to see it go. All the best to @kyle and crew.
I'm so sorry to say it, but today @linuxjournal closed down for good. As you can imagine we are all so sad that this is the end. You can read my final goodbye here:
https://www.linuxjournal.com/content/linux-journal-ceases-publication-awkward-goodbye
I had accepted that machines will take over many jobs in the coming decades but tasting whisky? That's the last straw. https://arstechnica.com/science/2019/08/is-that-rare-whiskey-bottle-the-real-deal-this-artificial-tongue-can-make-the-call/
Purism CTO, Nicole Faerber, nominated for “CTO of the Year” by Women in IT Awards.
https://puri.sm/posts/nicole-faerber-nominated-for-cto-of-the-year-by-women-in-it-awards/
@thegrugq @Viss Each server is run by different moderators with potentially different rules or plugins enabled.
Some servers are topical and attract specific interests, so their local timelines have more signal/noise for locals, others (like Librem One) are for everyone and in Librem One's case timelines are disabled altogether.
Think mail servers w/ different policies/spam rules. Some people just run their own, others outsource to others. Regardless everyone can communicate.
Technical author, FOSS advocate, public speaker, Linux security & infrastructure geek, author of The Best of Hack and /: Linux Admin Crash Course, Linux Hardening in Hostile Networks and many other books, ex-Linux Journal columnist.