At that point wouldn’t it be better to run a hypervisor? Qubes maybe?
- 13 Posts
- 48 Comments
HiddenLayer555@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Windows 10 refugees flock to Linux in what devs call their "biggest launch ever"English
43·5 days agoSays more about you if you think that’s an insult.
HiddenLayer555@lemmy.mlto
World News@lemmy.ml•Thieves steal 'priceless' jewels from Louvre in Paris and flee on motorbikesEnglish
4·5 days agoHonestly baffled why anyone still gives a shit about jewels. Literal useless rocks extracted by slave labour from France’s colonies with no industrial or personal uses, and formerly owned by a disgusting aristocrat as a way to show off his disgusting wealth.
Most jewels are just aluminum oxide crystals with colored inorganic impurities. Who cares if they’re stolen, just make more. The camera lens on your phone and the tube in an old school sodium vapour street light are jewels, and far purer ones than what you can dig out of the ground.
HiddenLayer555@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Windows 10 refugees flock to Linux in what devs call their "biggest launch ever"English
121·5 days agosudo systemctl start snakelinuxd
HiddenLayer555@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Windows 10 refugees flock to Linux in what devs call their "biggest launch ever"English
4541·5 days agoStop calling yourself a “refugee” whenever big tech fucks up something you were using. Anyone who thinks having to switch software is worthy of that word has no idea what it’s like to be a refugee. Check your privileged ass.
HiddenLayer555@lemmy.mlto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•Printers leave a watermark on each page indicating the exact printer that it came from. Are there any other examples of these privacy violations that aren't common knowledge?English
2·5 days agoEven without EXIF data I would bet the actual encoding of the image will be identifiable to a specific instance of the camera software.
Similar to how websites fingerprint your browser by rendering something in the canvas or webgl and sending back the rendered image. The exact same rendering procedure will produce slightly different images for each browser instance. I suspect browsers are fully aware and complicit in this because why the actual fuck would they not make the rendering engines deterministic to their inputs?!
HiddenLayer555@lemmy.mlto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•Printers leave a watermark on each page indicating the exact printer that it came from. Are there any other examples of these privacy violations that aren't common knowledge?English
982·5 days agoTons of websites record your mouse, keyboard, and scroll activity, and can play back exactly what you saw on your browser window from its backend dashboard as a video. This is called session replay. There are pre-made libraries for this you can import so it’s super common, I believe Mouseflow is one of the biggest providers.
When a mobile app, Windows app, or even website crashes nowadays, it automatically sends the crash dump to the app developer/OS vendor (the OS often does this whether the app requests it or not because the OS developer themselves are interested in what apps crash and in what ways). We’re talking full memory dump, so whatever private data was in the app’s memory when it crashed gets uploaded to a server somewhere without your consent, and almost certainly kept forever. God help you if the OS itself crashes because your entire computer’s state is getting reported to the devs.
Your phone’s gyroscope can record what you say by sensing vibrations in the air. It may or may not be something humans will recognize as speech if played back because the frequency range is too limited, but it’s been shown that there’s enough information for a speech recognition AI to decode. Good chance the accelerometer and other sensors can be used in the same way, and using them together will increase the fidelity making it easier to decode. Oh did I mention no device has ever implemented permission controls for sensors so any app or even website can access them without your consent or knowledge?
HiddenLayer555@lemmy.mlto
World News@lemmy.ml•China condemns US airstrikes in Caribbean, backs Venezuelan sovereigntyEnglish
132·7 days agoyou deserve to get your head caved in.
Ok orc
The fact that screenshots have the same artifact suggests it’s an issue within the GTK or GNOME framework. I would think if it was an issue with the GPU or drivers the screenshot would probably look normal or at least glitched in a different way.
HiddenLayer555@lemmy.mlto
Socialism@lemmy.ml•How can you hate capitalism when capitalism made your iPhone??English
17·8 days agoCapitalism didn’t make the smartphone but it sure as hell ruined it. Went from being the coolest device ever to the most frustrating.
HiddenLayer555@lemmy.mlto
World News@lemmy.ml•West instructed Russia on freedom of speech for years, now it wants to ban it — PutinEnglish
11·8 days agoThe West never had it in the first place. The Red Scare matched and even surpassed any anticapitalist speech suppression in the USSR yet it was hailed as the West “defending” its “freedoms” from the totalitarian communist ideology.
HiddenLayer555@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•What are some bare minimum concepts beginner Linux users should understand?English
21·9 days agoAs far as I know when you download a dmg, the OS checks its signatures against Apple’s registry and only allows installation if it’s approved. The developer would have submitted the app to Apple (for like $100) for them to inspect even if it’s not on the “official” app store.
Not a Mac user so please call me out if I’m just talking out my ass.
HiddenLayer555@lemmy.mlto
World News@lemmy.ml•Not aware of any Modi-Trump conversation on Wednesday, India's foreign ministry saysEnglish
6·9 days agoHe would unironically fall for a scam call pretending to be Modi.
HiddenLayer555@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•What are some bare minimum concepts beginner Linux users should understand?English
501·9 days agoDO NOT download and install random programs from the internet. Not a deb/rpm file, not an elf binary, not an install script, nothing. Use your package manager or desktop environment’s app store. At most use flatpak or snap packages.
Linux gets its reputation for not getting malware from the same place Mac does: It has a managed app repository where you get all your software from. Difference is Mac doesn’t let you install arbitrary programs at all, while Linux expects you to know better than to do that. Someone who doesn’t know what they’re doing downloading Linux programs from random websites will inevitably hit one of the super rare Linux malware in the wild.
Even ignoring security issues, running an install script even from a reputable open source project’s website can open you up to package dependency hell. And if you ever need to upgrade or modify it, you’re in for a rough time because none of the existing tools built into your distro will help you. It’s even worse than Windows when this happens because Windows at least expects for things like this to happen (because everything comes in its own installer and handles updates separately) and has UX elements to help non tech savvy users deal with their mess of apps, Linux expects anyone bypassing the normal package manager to know what they’re doing and if you don’t, it won’t be a good day for you.
HiddenLayer555@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•BombShell: The Signed Backdoor Hiding in Plain Sight on Framework Devices - Eclypsium | Supply Chain Security for the Modern EnterpriseEnglish
26·9 days agoWait until you hear about the proprietary microcode backdoors in Intel and AMD processors.
HiddenLayer555@lemmy.mlto
World News@lemmy.ml•Why Western executives who visit China are coming back terrifiedEnglish
2·11 days agoDefine “plenty.” What’s the fire rate compared to the total number of BYD cars in existance? How does that compare to Tesla? How’s the historical trend, is it going up or down? Are they equally likely to catch fire across the board or are there problematic models or series? Different countries have different automotive regulations and therefore have slightly different cars even if they’re the same model, are the fire rates different by country? Are domestic Chinese BYDs more likely to catch fire than cars exported to, say, other Asian countries, Latin America, or Africa?
This is why you don’t draw conclusions from how many YouTube videos you can find. When there are billions of any product there will inevitably be tons of videos of it going wrong which doesn’t inherently tell you whether it’s actually likely to happen or not. If that was an acceptable statistical analysis method, then I can binge watch the hundreds of thousands of aviation accident videos and conclude that literally all planes do is crash.
HiddenLayer555@lemmy.mlto
World News@lemmy.ml•Nobel Peace Prize winner supports Israel's genocide & Trump's war on VenezuelaEnglish
55·12 days agoDaily reminder that the Nobel Prize was (still is) purely a marketing move to scrub the reputation of the Merchant of Death, Alfred Nobel. Because he got butthurt that the newspapers had the audacity to shed light on the truth about his horrible legacy.
The first Nobel Peace Prize went to the woman he had a crush on and never got over even decades after she dumped his explosive peddling ass.
HiddenLayer555@lemmy.mlto
World News@lemmy.ml•Dutch government seizes control of Chinese-owned chipmaker NexperiaEnglish
12·12 days agoHow long before they accuse China of “technology theft” again?









The absolute irony of a site so infested by bots blocking VPNs.
Wonder how many VPS provider IPs they get from their “users”