Yeah, I haven’t either. I don’t even know how I installed it (package manager or raw). Will need to look into that.
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jonne@infosec.pubto
Technology@lemmy.world•Tragic Titan submersible’s $62 SanDisk memory card found undamaged at wreckage siteEnglish
222·5 months agoOver 18, but still young enough to not be predestined to become like the other billionaires I guess.
I used to run it for a while (it might actually still be running, I’d need to check my VPS and delete it if it is), but I feel like RSS readers kind of got overtaken by Reddit (and Lemmy). I tried going back to it again a few times, but the lack of comments felt off after having experienced Reddit.
jonne@infosec.pubto
Technology@lemmy.world•Apple has REMOVED the ICEBlock app from the App Store due to “objectionable content.”English
5·5 months agoOh yeah, of course, but it feels like it’s never part of the conversation, even among people whose opinions I respect and are, for example, super critical of AI and talking about enshittification and other issues in the online sphere, they never seem to take the step to check out Linux, or get off Twitter or whatever.
jonne@infosec.pubto
Technology@lemmy.world•Apple has REMOVED the ICEBlock app from the App Store due to “objectionable content.”English
16·5 months agoYeah, very disappointed by RMS’ creepiness (the Epstein stuff isn’t the only thing), but he was 100% right about software freedom.
jonne@infosec.pubto
Technology@lemmy.world•Apple has REMOVED the ICEBlock app from the App Store due to “objectionable content.”English
45·5 months agoI can see Microsoft moving to the same sort of thinking as well. Apple already made Mac OS users jump through hoops when you want to install something from the internet or even through a third party package manager like homebrew.
jonne@infosec.pubto
Technology@lemmy.world•Apple has REMOVED the ICEBlock app from the App Store due to “objectionable content.”English
673·5 months agoAnd the open source movement is such a blind spot to the ‘left’ as well, even though technology freedom is critical if you want to be able to organise any type of resistance in the digital space.
Lemmy users largely get it, obviously, but centre left people will happily let themselves get locked into the Apple/Google walled gardens even though you’re just giving that company a ridiculous amount of power over you.
jonne@infosec.pubto
Technology@lemmy.world•NYC Telecom Raid: What's Up with Those Weird SIM Banks?English
9·6 months agoI mean, you could probably use them that way, but there’s no indication that they were planning on doing that. One of those devices is only ~$3000, so if you want to spam all of New York and the upside is a bunch of people sending you their life savings it’s not exactly an investment that’s out of reach for your average crime syndicate.
State actors would probably hack into the Telco systems themselves instead, which you can do without needing to be on the ground. Or they’d keep their DDoS device in their embassy and do it from there.
jonne@infosec.pubto
Technology@lemmy.world•NYC Telecom Raid: What's Up with Those Weird SIM Banks?English
14·6 months agoThis looks like the gear normally used by gangs that do text spam scams, what makes this exactly out of the range for a run of the mill criminal syndicate? Unless they have some other information that they’re not sharing?
jonne@infosec.pubto
Technology@lemmy.world•Coordinated network amplifies child sex abuse on X, researchers warnEnglish
13·7 months agoPresumably the other ones are still working themselves through the courts.
jonne@infosec.pubto
Technology@lemmy.world•Sweden prime minister under fire after admitting that he regularly consults AI tools for a second opinionEnglish
9·7 months agoI mean, I don’t really love that he uses AI to begin with, but getting an opinion on top of what you get from your advisors that you hired could be good in theory. Except that most AIs are programmed to be equally sycophantic and they’re just plain wrong most of the time.
To me the most irresponsible part is sending your thoughts as the leader of a country straight to a US run company, you just know those prompts are being digested by the NSA directly, and possibly other intelligence agencies.
jonne@infosec.pubto
Technology@lemmy.world•Sweden prime minister under fire after admitting that he regularly consults AI tools for a second opinionEnglish
151·7 months agoExcept those prompts are retained by OpenAI, and you don’t know who’s got access to that. They’ve had chats leak before.
jonne@infosec.pubto
Technology@lemmy.world•Musk's AI firm deletes posts after chatbot praises Adolf HitlerEnglish
7·8 months agoIs he even trying to escape them? He’s been pretty clear about his opinions on Jews and the like.
Really depends on what data it is and whether you want to search it regularly or just as a one time thing.
You could load them into an rdbms (MySQL/Postgres) and have it handle the indexing, or use python tools to process the files. Something like elasticsearch could work too.
If it’s just a one time thing grep is probably fine tho.
Aleph could work as well but I have no experience with it.
I guess it depends on how much time you want to invest in setting something up versus how much time you’d lose waiting for grep to finish (if you only need to search a certain column, you can create an index with just that column using awk, search that index file, then extract the full line from the source file based on that result, but at that point you’re basically creating a new database engine).
jonne@infosec.pubto
Technology@lemmy.world•PNG has been updated for the first time in 22 years — new spec supports HDR and animationEnglish
151·8 months agoI mean, on a Linux system that’s not riddled with flatpak / snap / … You’d basically only need to update libpng and you’d be good.
jonne@infosec.pubto
Technology@lemmy.world•Operation Narnia: Iran’s nuclear scientists reportedly killed simultaneously using special weaponEnglish
52·9 months agoYeah, that’s definitely true for imperialist countries like Israel, the US and Russia.
jonne@infosec.pubto
Technology@lemmy.world•Operation Narnia: Iran’s nuclear scientists reportedly killed simultaneously using special weaponEnglish
202·9 months agoI mean, that’s not really surprising. Every military makes plans for any contingency, and Israel especially has always been paranoid about Iran’s nuclear programme, so of course they would make sure they’re tracking the scientists in case they needed to make a move.
The disgusting part is them just pulling the trigger for political reasons instead of actual intelligence that indicates a breakout. And obviously killing civilians, which the scientists and their families are, but obviously Israel has shown in the past they don’t care about that.
jonne@infosec.pubto
Technology@lemmy.world•I Tried Pre-Ordering the Trump Phone. The Page Failed and It Charged My Credit Card the Wrong AmountEnglish
19·9 months agoUsually he’s not even involved in running the business, they’re licensing deals where some scammer pays a few million up front to use the Trump name, which is then used to scam his followers.
Sure, everyone else is wrong, and you’re right even when you’re seemingly deliberately misreading everything. If you’re not trolling, you should probably get yourself checked.


You have to keep in mind that ever since Elon took over Twitter, nobody’s left that actually understands how it works, so whenever they implement a change they do it in the most hamfisted way possible, usually in the presentation layer.
Disabling translation was just the easiest way to do this, as banning Israeli accounts for their actual hate speech was going to get the ADL on Elons ass.