IllNess

joined 2 years ago
[–] IllNess 3 points 3 days ago

I understand parents can't be around their children 24/7. Companies and organizations have a lot of products already to restrict and limit internet access. Schools and libraries should use these tools as they or as their community sees fit.

If you want to compare it to tobacco products, the main difference is to identify as an adult all you need is an ID. One person at the cashier sees it and it's done. Online activity is more personal. It allows companies and social media to be even more toxic to adults by being able to identify adults better.

Also kids, no matter how restricted it is, will smoke if they wanted to. The same will happen with these social media restrictions excepts that adults will suffer. This will be only the beginning. More and more restrictions will come from this. That's just how governments work.

Red flags should go up automatically with these "save the children" laws.

[–] IllNess 12 points 3 days ago (2 children)

Parenting should stay with parents. The more power the government gets, the more they will abuse it. When companies are restricted, they will see this as an opportunity to better identify adults better.

[–] IllNess 1 points 3 days ago

I think Docker had an option to use Apple's VM over the Docker one. I think they were trying to say builtin

[–] IllNess 4 points 3 days ago

You too homie!

[–] IllNess 14 points 3 days ago
[–] IllNess 18 points 3 days ago (4 children)

Why do you have the same handwriting as me?

[–] IllNess 10 points 4 days ago

Java has been around a really long time and I was still surprised how well it did.

I am shocked Fortran didn't do better. I don't code in Fortran. I assumed languages closer machine would do well.

[–] IllNess 32 points 5 days ago (1 children)

By the end of the day, the Greene County Sheriff’s Department charged her and 15 other middle school cheerleaders with disorderly conduct for making and posting the video.

What ever happened to free speech in this country? Fascism.

[–] IllNess 1 points 5 days ago

Note: this isn't free but I use 1DM+. It has it's own browser that filters out the videos for download. It won't work with YouTube and a bunch of other websites because Google acts like a little bitch to the developer.

[–] IllNess 10 points 6 days ago (1 children)

Why would you allow any outsider to your code without using version control?

[–] IllNess 18 points 6 days ago (8 children)

I always thought these were more like walkie talkies for messaging than telephones that you can call anyone.

Like it would be good if cell serivce goes down.

[–] IllNess 40 points 1 week ago

You hear that everyone. So for AI to reject your content just put in facts about systemic racism and now you have an AI blocker.

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.zip/post/30049292

Emergent macOS vulnerability lets adversaries circumvent Apple's System Integrity Protection (SIP) by loading third-party kernels.

 

New research has pulled back the curtain on a "deficiency" in Google's "Sign in with Google" authentication flow that exploits a quirk in domain ownership to gain access to sensitive data.

 

The ambitious final executive order requires 52 agency actions to bolster cyber protections and counter adversaries, including a new plan to address spiraling digital identity theft.

 

The threat actors use a variety of distribution channels, including malvertising, spearphishing, and brand impersonation in online gaming, cryptocurrency, and software, to spread 50 malware payloads, including AMOS, Stealc, and Rhadamanthys.

Victims are lured into downloading malicious software by interacting with what they are tricked into believing are legitimate job opportunities or project collaborations.

On Windows, HijackLoader is used for delivering Stealc, a general-purpose lightweight info-stealer designed to collect data from browsers and crypto wallet apps, or Rhadamanthys, a more specialized stealer that targets a broad range of applications and data types.

When the target uses macOS, Marko Polo deploys Atomic ('AMOS'). This stealer launched in mid-2023, rented to cybercriminals for $1,000/month, allowing them to snatch various data stored in web browsers.

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