Miscellaneous Tech News
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@dafyre said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@Dashrender said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@mlnews said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Hackers breach Quora.com and steal password data for 100 million users
Other stolen personal data includes names, email addresses, and direct messages.
Brace yourself for yet another massive data breach. Quora.com, a site where people ask and answer questions on a range of topics, said hackers breached its computer network and accessed a variety of potentially sensitive personal data for about 100 million users.
Man - we really need to move to a system that doesn't require websites to have any private data on them, or at least very little.
I really hope SQRL takes hold - getting rid of at least the password would be a great start.
I've heard of SQRL before. It's an interesting concept if nothing else...
https://www.grc.com/sqrl/sqrl.htm has a good explanation of it.The idea is awesome - but does have one huge drawback - making the end user ultimately responsible for their credentials. i.e. if you lose the top most key in the chain (think of it like a root CA's top most private key) then that identity is also lost.
From the tidbits he's talked about on the show - it seems like SRQL will make an original key - that will be used to make a child key, the original key will be printed/written down/etc, then deleted from the device.
In the case where you lose control of your child key, you use the original key to make a new child key, and because they share the same parent key, previously authenticated sites can follow the chain and setup the new public key for you at their site based on the new child key.
And on and on and on...
Steve's biggest issue in my opinion (with regards to SQRL) is that he's not releasing it until he thinks it's perfect - that whole 'first impression' thing. I guess I can see that a bit, I guess only time will tell if that was worth waiting for.
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@scottalanmiller said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@Dashrender said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
That said - so many sites today I think are just shit - so much crap out there in WP-land.
.You aren't seriously comparing random WP sites to that, though. C'mon, it's ridiculous. Not casual "I just used a WP template" ridiculous, it's astoundingly bad. To the point, I'm not convinced he's in business. I think, from looking at the products on the site, that he gave up years ago on the company and just does podcasts and stuff.
I think he stopped caring what the site looked like back in the 90's sure. I think nothing more than that. Frankly - I am surprised that Leo, his cohost, hasn't said something about the old style of the site.
Steve also hates JavaScript (is that the write way to type that?) His current site is done in all CSS, which he believes (or at least did in the past) was more secure and safe for end users. JavaScript itself isn't unsafe - it's just so fraking powerful, etc, etc... so don't read to much into my comment here - it's mostly my interpretation, and I leave plenty of room to not be representing him correctly.
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@scottalanmiller said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@Dashrender said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
As for - does he program - well, he claims he's the one doing in on his show, so assuming he's not lieing, we have that.
I'm not looking for more than that. But needed at least him to have stated that he programs, rather than it being purely an assumption.
So many people call Steve Jobs a great programmer - but he never claimed to be and didn't have the first clue how to program.
Awww - yeah, Steve Gibson claims to be coding regularly, specifically on SQRL - and eventually on SpinRite again.
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@Dashrender said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
The idea is awesome - but does have one huge drawback - making the end user ultimately responsible for their credentials. i.e. if you lose the top most key in the chain (think of it like a root CA's top most private key) then that identity is also lost.
I will have to 100% agree with you here. We all know users are wonderful about backing things up and keeping them in secure places, right?
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@Dashrender said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Steve's biggest issue in my opinion (with regards to SQRL) is that he's not releasing it until he thinks it's perfect - that whole 'first impression' thing. I guess I can see that a bit, I guess only time will tell if that was worth waiting for.
There are some test implementations out there. I checked the Play store and there's a couple of SQRL apps that supposedly will work in that manner.
I think eventually, it's a good way to go. For IT folks -- or users that are comfortable with making good backups and keeping important things securely, it has potential now, if it would get some adoption behind it.
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Apple Issues Security Fixes Across Mac, iOS
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Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 855 is official, coming to Android flagships in 2019
Qualcomm is promising a 45-percent faster CPU and a 20-percent faster GPU.
Qualcomm has announced its flagship System on a Chip (SoC) for 2019: the Snapdragon 855. As Qualcomm has basically no competition at the high-end SoC market—especially in the US—the Snapdragon 855 will be headed to almost every flagship Android phone that ships in 2019. Compared to 2018's chip, the Snapdragon 845, Qualcomm is promising a 45-percent faster CPU, a 20-percent faster GPU, and a platform that will usher in the era of 5G connectivity.
So how is the Snapdragon 855 different from its predecessor, the Snapdragon 845? First, we're getting smaller transistors. The Snapdragon 845 was built on Samsung's 10nm semiconductor manufacturing process, but the 855 is moving to TSMC's 7nm process. A smaller manufacturing process comes with the benefit of lower power consumption and smaller chips, and the 7nm node puts the Snapdragon 855 on par with Apple, which shipped the 7nm A12 Bionic SoC in the iPhone XS earlier this year.
The Snapdragon 845 CPU was branded "Kryo 385" and had four 2.7Ghz Cortex A75-based cores and four 1.8GHz Cortex A55-based cores. These two CPU clusters split the CPU into "big" and "little" workloads, where four bigger, more power-hungry cores handled heavier processing duties like foreground apps (the A75 cores) and four slower, lower-power cores handled background tasks and idle processing (the A55 cores).
The Snapdragon 855 is still kind of built with this 4+4 core layout, but now one of the big cores has a boosted clock rate. So the new Snapdragon 855 CPU is branded "Kryo 485" and changes to four newer Cortex A76-based cores for the "big" cluster, with three cores clocked at 2.42GHz and one clocked at 2.84GHz. Qualcomm is calling this boosted core the "Prime Core." The smaller core cluster uses the same four 1.8GHz Cortex A55-based cores as the older chip.
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@black3dynamite said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2018/12/microsoft-edge-for-linux-possible
Yeah, but Edge is Chrome now. And there is already Chrome for Linux. So... whatevs.
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@scottalanmiller said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@black3dynamite said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2018/12/microsoft-edge-for-linux-possible
Yeah, but Edge is Chrome now. And there is already Chrome for Linux. So... whatevs.
Well the same could be said for any of the Chromium offshoots - if you like something other than Google Chrome, it's still worthwhile.
The main thing Edge's version could have over Chrome is much less tracking.
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@Dashrender said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
The main thing Edge's version could have over Chrome is much less tracking.
What proof do you have that Edge is doing any less tracking?
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@DustinB3403 said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@Dashrender said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
The main thing Edge's version could have over Chrome is much less tracking.
What proof do you have that Edge is doing any less tracking?
I said 'could' - and what proof do you have the aren't?
MS isn't an advertising company - sure they are tracking things, but I tend to believe that it's more for their own use on their products - but of course seeing the state of the products and the lack of overall improvement - that seems to be hard to believe. so /meh
And besides, it's pretty hard to compete with how hard Google is tracking you.
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@Dashrender said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
I said 'could' - and what proof do you have the aren't?
I don't need to present proof, the proof is right on the setup screen for their opt-in tracking and Cortana functions.
MS isn't an advertising company - sure they are tracking things, but I tend to believe that it's more for their own use on their products - but of course seeing the state of the products and the lack of overall improvement - that seems to be hard to believe. so /meh
And besides, it's pretty hard to compete with how hard Google is tracking you.
It's not hard to compete with Google, when you're using their tools!
Edit: Microsoft certainly is getting into the Advertising space, have you not ever looked at their opt-in screen?
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@DustinB3403 said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@Dashrender said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
I said 'could' - and what proof do you have the aren't?
I don't need to present proof, the proof is right on the setup screen for their opt-in tracking and Cortana functions.
MS isn't an advertising company - sure they are tracking things, but I tend to believe that it's more for their own use on their products - but of course seeing the state of the products and the lack of overall improvement - that seems to be hard to believe. so /meh
And besides, it's pretty hard to compete with how hard Google is tracking you.
It's not hard to compete with Google, when you're using their tools!
Edit: Microsoft certainly is getting into the Advertising space, have you not ever looked at their opt-in screen?
Yeah they do advertising... I use them on my website - media.net, and it's actually quite nice. I like it way more than Google advertising.
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@Obsolesce said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@DustinB3403 said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@Dashrender said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
I said 'could' - and what proof do you have the aren't?
I don't need to present proof, the proof is right on the setup screen for their opt-in tracking and Cortana functions.
MS isn't an advertising company - sure they are tracking things, but I tend to believe that it's more for their own use on their products - but of course seeing the state of the products and the lack of overall improvement - that seems to be hard to believe. so /meh
And besides, it's pretty hard to compete with how hard Google is tracking you.
It's not hard to compete with Google, when you're using their tools!
Edit: Microsoft certainly is getting into the Advertising space, have you not ever looked at their opt-in screen?
Yeah they do advertising... I use them on my website - media.net, and it's actually quite nice. I like it way more than Google advertising.
haha, you're entire website gets blocked by uBlock Origin. . . hahah
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Unless I am mistaken (and that usually does happen a lot with me), Linux.org is down. Unsure as to why. Somebody in the Telegram forums said that the organization let the registration lapse and somebody else has exploited it and isn't doing anything with it yet.
Can anybody find a headline on this yet?
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@Obsolesce said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@DustinB3403 said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@Dashrender said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
I said 'could' - and what proof do you have the aren't?
I don't need to present proof, the proof is right on the setup screen for their opt-in tracking and Cortana functions.
MS isn't an advertising company - sure they are tracking things, but I tend to believe that it's more for their own use on their products - but of course seeing the state of the products and the lack of overall improvement - that seems to be hard to believe. so /meh
And besides, it's pretty hard to compete with how hard Google is tracking you.
It's not hard to compete with Google, when you're using their tools!
Edit: Microsoft certainly is getting into the Advertising space, have you not ever looked at their opt-in screen?
Yeah they do advertising... I use them on my website - media.net, and it's actually quite nice. I like it way more than Google advertising.
is your site broken?
It currently looks worse than GRC.com.
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@NerdyDad said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Unless I am mistaken (and that usually does happen a lot with me), Linux.org is down. Unsure as to why. Somebody in the Telegram forums said that the organization let the registration lapse and somebody else has exploited it and isn't doing anything with it yet.
Can anybody find a headline on this yet?
It's redirecting me to a twitter page... Not as big as I thought. Linux.org is a fan run linux forum. kernel.org is the official site.
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@NerdyDad said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Unless I am mistaken (and that usually does happen a lot with me), Linux.org is down. Unsure as to why. Somebody in the Telegram forums said that the organization let the registration lapse and somebody else has exploited it and isn't doing anything with it yet.
Can anybody find a headline on this yet?
It took me to a twitter feed.