Miscellaneous Tech News
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@scottalanmiller said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@jaredbusch said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@scottalanmiller said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
I thought he did that.
He just tried to use a different platform.
Said platform shutdown until it found new hosts willing to accept them.
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/07/01/gettr-trump-social-media-platform-497606
That's what I saw.
Yes, he mentioned a few times that he was contemplating starting his own.
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@jaredbusch said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@scottalanmiller said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
That's what I saw.
Ah, had not heard of that one yet.
I found it, but Google doesn't seem to list it...
LOL, funny stuff.
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@pmoncho said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Yes, he mentioned a few times that he was contemplating starting his own.
He says it all the time. But he has not. Various organizations have.
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Look, they recommend that you follow the "solid blocks of stone that are pyramids in the desert are actually grain silos" guy...
https://gettr.com/user/benscarson
This is why Johns Hopkins will never be a feather in anyone's cap when talking to me. JH actually promoted this guy, not just hired him. If you work for JH, I assume you are the uber-dunce.
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@jaredbusch said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@pmoncho said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Yes, he mentioned a few times that he was contemplating starting his own.
He says it all the time. But he has not. Various organizations have.
He's at least using it...
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@scottalanmiller said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
He's at least using it...
Using is not starting. But yeah.
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Apparently the problem with Team Trump (that's what they are called, not an opinion) is that they promised that the purpose would be to be a censor free platform but now it is all spam and fake accounts so its being heavily censored..
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@jaredbusch said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@scottalanmiller said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
He's at least using it...
Using is not starting. But yeah.
Problem is... as a person who isn't even literate, let alone able to figure out what a website is, what does "Trump starting a platform" look like other than encouraging people in his sphere to make something he influences and to get it online? It's not like he has funds to pay for this stuff himself (he's dirt poor according to all reports) nor the wherewithal to even understand what it is. I mean this guys a dufus. You can like or hate him as a person, but you can't argue that he's got any smarts in there, this is the dumbest sounding public person potentially, ever. I can't imagine what talking to him about "making a website" would go like.
So having people in his circle create a platform that's exactly what he said that he wanted, after demanding publicly that it happen... is what "Trump makes his own platform" would be if we defined the parameters before it happened.
Just like if anyone's senile grandmother suddenly got hopped up on coke and demanded she get her own Facebook where no knitting pattern would be censored. She's likely have no idea what she was saying. But some well meaning cousin might spin up a WordPress site to keep her happy.
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@scottalanmiller said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Problem is... as a person who isn't even literate, let alone able to figure out what a website is, what does "Trump starting a platform" look like other than encouraging people in his sphere to make something he influences and to get it online?
Directly from your first link a few posts up.
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@jaredbusch said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@scottalanmiller said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Problem is... as a person who isn't even literate, let alone able to figure out what a website is, what does "Trump starting a platform" look like other than encouraging people in his sphere to make something he influences and to get it online?
Directly from your first link a few posts up.
That doesn't clear much up, though, right? He said he wanted this done, his inner circle followed that order. That's what "Trump makes something" looks like.
He wanted a wall built. He told people to build one. He didn't go out there with a hammer himself.
In a situation where you want something done that you know nothing about, and you tell your people you want it... and it gets made... even if they say "we don't know if he's participate", that doesn't change the fact that he gave a loose order and it was loosely followed.
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Microsoft’s emergency patch fails to fix critical “PrintNightmare” vulnerability
Game-over code-execution attacks are still possible even after fix is installed.
An emergency patch Microsoft issued on Tuesday fails to fully fix a critical security vulnerability in all supported versions of Windows that allows attackers to take control of infected systems and run code of their choice, researchers said. The threat, colloquially known as PrintNightmare, stems from bugs in the Windows print spooler, which provides printing functionality inside local networks. Proof-of-concept exploit code was publicly released and then pulled back, but not before others had copied it. Researchers track the vulnerability as CVE-2021-34527. -
The Windows 11 insider build is surprisingly unpolished and unfinished
Windows 11 looks to be a decent upgrade, but not one to lose sleep over missing.
Microsoft made early Windows 11 builds available via its Windows Insider program the week after its first major announcement, and we've spent quite a few hours kicking the tires. When Windows 11 publicly releases, it's likely to be a fine operating system—but right now, it's an unpolished, unfinished mess. Of course, this isn't a surprise—Windows 11 is still only available in the Dev channel of the Insider program. The three Insider channels are Release Preview, Beta, and Dev; Dev roughly corresponds to a software alpha, and Microsoft itself describes it as "the newest code," with "rough edges and some instability." -
@mlnews said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
The Windows 11 insider build is surprisingly unpolished and unfinished
Windows 11 looks to be a decent upgrade, but not one to lose sleep over missing.
Microsoft made early Windows 11 builds available via its Windows Insider program the week after its first major announcement, and we've spent quite a few hours kicking the tires. When Windows 11 publicly releases, it's likely to be a fine operating system—but right now, it's an unpolished, unfinished mess. Of course, this isn't a surprise—Windows 11 is still only available in the Dev channel of the Insider program. The three Insider channels are Release Preview, Beta, and Dev; Dev roughly corresponds to a software alpha, and Microsoft itself describes it as "the newest code," with "rough edges and some instability."How can that possibly be surprising. It has "Windows" right in the name. Windows 10 has been out for years and is totally unpolished and unfinished. Updates STILL don't work, at all. It's buggy as hell as if no one at MS has ever tried to use it themselves (actually, they probably don't.)
The title should read "Totally As Expected, Windows 11 Insider Build is Unpolished and Unfinished"
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@scottalanmiller said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@mlnews said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
The Windows 11 insider build is surprisingly unpolished and unfinished
Windows 11 looks to be a decent upgrade, but not one to lose sleep over missing.
Microsoft made early Windows 11 builds available via its Windows Insider program the week after its first major announcement, and we've spent quite a few hours kicking the tires. When Windows 11 publicly releases, it's likely to be a fine operating system—but right now, it's an unpolished, unfinished mess. Of course, this isn't a surprise—Windows 11 is still only available in the Dev channel of the Insider program. The three Insider channels are Release Preview, Beta, and Dev; Dev roughly corresponds to a software alpha, and Microsoft itself describes it as "the newest code," with "rough edges and some instability."How can that possibly be surprising. It has "Windows" right in the name. Windows 10 has been out for years and is totally unpolished and unfinished. Updates STILL don't work, at all. It's buggy as hell as if no one at MS has ever tried to use it themselves (actually, they probably don't.)
The title should read "Totally As Expected, Windows 11 Insider Build is Unpolished and Unfinished"
In my testing, I did not experience any of the issues in that article. Other than that, title is just for clicks.
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@dbeato said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@dafyre But they have said it doesn't fix it
https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2021/07/microsofts-emergency-patch-fails-to-fix-critical-printnightmare-vulnerability/I guess we'll be doing this again next week then...again. lol.
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@dafyre said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@dbeato said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@dafyre But they have said it doesn't fix it
https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2021/07/microsofts-emergency-patch-fails-to-fix-critical-printnightmare-vulnerability/I guess we'll be doing this again next week then...again. lol.
That's what I told the boss this morning!
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Microsoft discovers critical SolarWinds zero-day under active attack
Flaws allow attackers to run malicious code on machines hosting Serv-U products.
SolarWinds, the company at the center of a supply chain attack that compromised nine US agencies and 100 private companies, is scrambling to contain a new security threat: a critical zero-day vulnerability in its Serv-U product line. Microsoft discovered the exploits and privately reported them to SolarWinds, the latter company said in an advisory published on Friday. SolarWinds said the attacks are entirely unrelated to the supply chain attack discovered in December. -
@mlnews Yeah, not the first from Serv-U won't be the last lol
https://www.trustwave.com/en-us/resources/blogs/spiderlabs-blog/full-system-control-with-new-solarwinds-orion-based-and-serv-u-ftp-vulnerabilities/
That was back in February 3rd, 2021. -
@mlnews said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Microsoft discovers critical SolarWinds zero-day under active attack
Flaws allow attackers to run malicious code on machines hosting Serv-U products.
SolarWinds, the company at the center of a supply chain attack that compromised nine US agencies and 100 private companies, is scrambling to contain a new security threat: a critical zero-day vulnerability in its Serv-U product line. Microsoft discovered the exploits and privately reported them to SolarWinds, the latter company said in an advisory published on Friday. SolarWinds said the attacks are entirely unrelated to the supply chain attack discovered in December.What idiot still has SolarWinds deployed? Anyone breached now was asking for it.
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Microsoft announces Windows 365, a subscription cloud PC
Microsoft has announced a new "cloud PC" product where users can stream a Windows device from anywhere.
Windows 365 will work similarly to game streaming - where the computing is done in a data centre somewhere remotely and streamed to a device. That means all sorts of devices - including tablets or Apple Macs - can stream a full Windows desktop PC. It is being sold to businesses to begin with, as many firms move to a mix of office and remote working. Microsoft is marketing the new way of using a PC as "hybrid Windows for a hybrid world". The company says that every user's apps and settings will boot instantly from any device - allowing personalised Windows PCs to be accessed from anywhere.