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Whoever named this needs a lesson in modern malware branding. "eCh0raix" really? NASty NAP is the obvious choice: zdnet.com/article/this-new-ran

I imagine many in will conclude the ends justify the means, and I imagine most Apple users won't care, but I still think silently pushing non-interactive 3rd-party app updates to consumer devices is creepy: techcrunch.com/2019/07/10/appl

“If people saw a cop sitting in front of their church or their oncologist writing down license plates, people would be concerned."

But law enforcement are using automated license plate readers to effectively do just that, says EFF's @maassive slate.com/technology/2019/07/a

I'm on Mastodon again... Via Librem.one :D

This sounds cool. I tried setting it up, but I can't reach the git repo (might be my corporate firewall having a good time with me). Has anybody else done this and what did you think? Thanks for the article @kyle!

"What Really IRCs Me: Mastodon | Linux Journal"

linuxjournal.com/content/what-

What Really IRCs Me: Mastodon
By @kyle
Learn how to use the Mastodon social network platform from the comfort of your regular #IRC client. linuxjournal.com/content/what-

And we're back in California. What a difference a few states makes.

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Lessons in Vendor Lock-in: Google and Huawei
by @kyle
What happens when you're locked in to a vendor that's too big to fail, but is on the opposite end of a trade war?

linuxjournal.com/content/lesso

Whenever I cross the continental divide it's a watershed moment.

There's nothing like a road trip to show just how much we overpay for gasoline in California.

Our new Librem Keys are Made in USA! I wrote a brief post on why having an even more secure supply chain is so important. Watching these come off the line is even more mesmerizing than watching my 3D printer. puri.sm/posts/made-in-usa-libr

Today's office is brought to you by a lake outside of Lansing.

@lwriemen I'm not a security expert, but I'm a self-hoster. @kyle made the security concepts easy to understand, isn't paranoid, and gives useful real-life advice.

I especially liked the "if every company handled the basics right, they would have prevented a lot of what happened" bit

I've been reading @kyle Rankin's Hardening Linux book, and the client chapter confirmed what I suspected, since I've started using Linux, that Linux has security issues as a client OS. The Qubes setup was interesting, but sounds very resource intensive. It also reminds me of how the Unix workstation model was setup, when I was lucky enough to work under it.

I think apps were sandboxed better under OS/2, but I'd have to revisit The Design of OS/2 to be sure.

I recommend the Hardening Linux book

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