Before and during WW1 nations attempted to ban weapons that were too frightening or that gave one side an advantage, including dropping bombs from planes/blimps, firing from subs while underwater, and chemical weapons. Didn't work. https://www.businessinsider.com/killer-drone-hunted-down-human-target-without-being-told-un-2021-5
Something about this Epic lawsuit is causing some Apple users to notice the pot of water they are bathing in is getting hot.
Couldn't have said it better myself: "Apple says it's protecting our security and privacy, but it has become clear that locking down our iPhones is also about controlling us so Apple can make more money." https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2021/05/27/apple-iphone-monopoly/
Guest Blogger @ajmartinez has written up a great technical guide on how to use Qubes's advanced isolation features on his Librem 14 to manage and store GPG keys securely on a pair of Librem Keys. https://puri.sm/posts/guest-post-librem-14-librem-keys-and-qubes-os/
As promised yesterday, here's a walkthrough on using Qubes OS disposable VMs, opensc, hybrid encryption, and USB security tokens (Librem Key) on my Librem 14 to create redundant hardware tokens from the encrypted backup of my GPG keyring:
https://ajmartinez.com/tech/posts/202121-002-gpg
None of this is groundbreaking, but these steps do not seem to exist in any one document that I could find so I wrote one.
You sometimes hear people say Linux (and by extension Open Source) "won" because of how ubiquitous it is in Android phones and IoT devices.
Yet today's release of Google's new OS Fuchsia on Nest devices points to a future where Linux is left behind. This is a future where the dominant OSes on devices are Fuchsia, iOS, and Windows.
https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2021/05/google-launches-its-third-major-operating-system-fuchsia/
I remember when it seemed like the open chat standard XMPP "won" 15 years ago when Google Talk adopted it. It seemed like maybe the bad old days of proprietary chat protocols were over.
Google of course abandoned XMPP and later 5 or so other chat protocols. Today the messaging world is a mess of proprietary protocols and networks all reinventing the same wheels.
Another week with the @purism Librem 14 and I’m quite pleased.
Also this release seems to have done away with the pip install that was in the OpenSnitch UI post-install script and just pulls in dependency packages, so another big improvement.
There's a new OpenSnitch release candidate 1.4.0-rc.2. This one specifically mentions improved window layouts for Librem 5: https://github.com/evilsocket/opensnitch/discussions/415
The phish you warned them all about
The patch they said they could do without
They're in an awful mess
And I don't mean maybe
Please...
Business got breached
they're in trouble deep
Business got breached
they've been losing sleep
But they've made up their mind
they're paying the ransom
Ooh, they're gonna pay the ransom
Now that cars have become rolling smartphones, it's been pretty disappointing to see them copy some of the worst practices from the smartphone world. I wrote an article that talks about some of those problems. [CW: Tesla negativity] https://puri.sm/posts/locked-in-a-remote-control-car/
“Current trends in the automotive industry point to a future with you locked in a remote control car, your vendor holding the remote." https://puri.sm/posts/locked-in-a-remote-control-car/
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.