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Fnoord

9,232 karmajoined 10 lat temu

Submissions

Innova-2 Flex XCKU15P Setup and Usage Notes

github.com
1 points·by Fnoord·6 miesięcy temu·0 comments

In-house electronics manufacturing from scratch: How hard can it be? [video]

media.ccc.de
4 points·by Fnoord·6 miesięcy temu·0 comments

The Angry Path to Zen: AMD Zen Microcode Tools and Insights [video]

media.ccc.de
6 points·by Fnoord·6 miesięcy temu·1 comments

I Hated All the Cross-Stitch Software So I Made My Own [video]

media.ccc.de
2 points·by Fnoord·6 miesięcy temu·0 comments

The Heartbreak Machine: Nazis in the Echo Chamber [video]

media.ccc.de
6 points·by Fnoord·6 miesięcy temu·1 comments

L1TF Reloaded

github.com
35 points·by Fnoord·6 miesięcy temu·4 comments

Spectre in the real world: Leaking your private data from cloud with CPU vulns [video]

media.ccc.de
5 points·by Fnoord·6 miesięcy temu·0 comments

Word Rain

github.com
2 points·by Fnoord·6 miesięcy temu·0 comments

Word Rain

wordrain.org
2 points·by Fnoord·6 miesięcy temu·0 comments

AI-generated content in Wikipedia – a tale of caution [video]

media.ccc.de
4 points·by Fnoord·6 miesięcy temu·0 comments

Who Cares about the Baltic Jammer? Terrestrial Navigation in Baltic Sea Region [video]

media.ccc.de
16 points·by Fnoord·7 miesięcy temu·1 comments

The SR-71 Blackbird crew that 'gave the birdie' to a Mirage pilot

theaviationgeekclub.com
5 points·by Fnoord·7 miesięcy temu·0 comments

Europeans' health data sold to US firm run by ex-Israeli spies

ftm.eu
701 points·by Fnoord·7 miesięcy temu·418 comments

Cellebrite Completes Acquisition of Corellium

cellebrite.com
1 points·by Fnoord·7 miesięcy temu·0 comments

Cellebrite to Acquire Corellium

corellium.com
16 points·by Fnoord·7 miesięcy temu·1 comments

comments

Fnoord
·12 godzin temu·discuss
Yup, classic, mixed EP with EC. Makes you wonder if he explained it correctly to his wife (American lawyer), or if she verified.

I don't like the way US presidents are elected either, ignoring popular vote, and including gerrymandering. I also don't like how the US president is allowed to bypass Congress.
Fnoord
·12 godzin temu·discuss
Because in the name Elon Musk, Elon stands out.
Fnoord
·4 dni temu·discuss
I skimmed through the article. Several pictures are also repeated. Would this kind of thing happen before 2020? I don't think so.

Either way, I got taught in high school geography that parts of rivers get rebuild all the time. The Maas (Meuse, as Dutch is my native language I say Maas) gets longer due to the corners getting more sharp (due to water and wind erosion). Then at some point, the water might actually go straight between two corners, leading to the part between the two corners (an extra 180 degrees of two corners, though might look like one) getting cut. Sometimes, that doesn't happen (quick enough) and humans need to help nature a bit. Because sometimes, the new part of river tends to reach villages or other parts of society humans want to preserve. So, we interfere. Near Maastricht, there's also a canal next to the Maas, and this can help with deficit or excess water in the Maas. But sometimes, even an extra part of river next to the old river is build. IIRC they do that because the erosion destroyed such parts, that the outcome of the erosion keeps coming back and back in too short amounts of time. So then, it makes more sense to look for a more long term solution.

The water and wind erosion were interesting to me back in the days. So, from memory (and I surely am forgetting something here, possibly related to the chemistry of the water/earth), the way it works on low water level the wind on the corners erodes the corners, while on high water level the water pressurizes against the corner, leading to basins in the (wind eroded) corner which itself is part of the domino effect. In other words, it is bound to happen, given time. The river snaking around is bound to happen, and the breach is bound to happen as well. But the breach usually means the river goes to its original pathway (although temporarily).

So for a large river as the Nile, it also comes as no surprise Egyptian government (Egypt being the country who benefit from the Nile delta) invests in the Nile. But the main problem the Nile faces is AFAIK related to drought which is related to climate. I'm not sure how they want to fix that.
Fnoord
·5 dni temu·discuss
Hanging it on a wall like that would be great in say a tiny house / limited space. But what about dust entry? I got cats.
Fnoord
·6 dni temu·discuss
> The code is also copyrighted and owning a license for a game does not make you safe from being sued for pirating that game or its code. It's fine in this case only because the engine was open sourced.

Nothing makes you safe from getting sued.

See also: [1]. You could also reverse engineer in a solid jurisdiction.

I ran C&C Generals in Wine on Linux back in the days. More stable than Windows XP.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clean-room_design
Fnoord
·8 dni temu·discuss
In the end it is legal tender, owned by the government of said legal tender. But Google owes another legal entity money. They're in debt to that other legal entity, and they should pay said debt (pay the fine). It is actually 4.7 billion EUR.

And on top of all of the above, there's another reason Google owes us money. Google does not even pay fair taxes.
Fnoord
·9 dni temu·discuss
Funny you mention that. For me (Dutch), growing up in same time, Wimbledon and Roland Garros are the two main tennis tournaments. When these were on TV, Olivetti brand was prominently mentioned at the scoreboards. I always imagined they were a brand who made the computers used for the scoreboards, but otherwise had no idea what that brand meant. You wouldn't 'Google' or 'Wikipedia' it. You saw it, you asked your parents (or other peers), and they'd either know or not.
Fnoord
·9 dni temu·discuss
It isn't Google's money if they wrongfully profited it, and are fined. It belongs to the victims. The government of the victims will invest it in making the victims less dependent on the perpetrator? Well played.
Fnoord
·9 dni temu·discuss
1) Anyone can fall for a scam. Especially those who believe they wouldn't fall for a scam. This is why ridiculing those who fall for [a] scam is harmful, and serves scammers. 2) You can root a smartphone for someone else's usage. For example, I can install pmOS on a smartphone and hand it over to my kid.
Fnoord
·9 dni temu·discuss
Then I'd switch bank. A lot of banks work with SFOS [1]. Given the way the US is acting, we are trying to lower our dependence on American services, and I very much doubt all banks will walk the US bandwagon. There's a serious market for something else.

[1] https://forum.sailfishos.org/t/banking-apps-on-sailfish-os/1...
Fnoord
·9 dni temu·discuss
Because almost all people cannot hear the difference between a high quality lossy codec versus lossless in a double blind test. They think they do, but they don't.
Fnoord
·12 dni temu·discuss
> Codeberg is not keen on closed-source repos.

A feature, not a bug. If I go to a website meant to distribute source repos (git, etc), I expect them to be FOSS. Also, the title mentions 'EU Open Sources [...]' so this is irrelevant to the topic at hand.

Either way, perfect is the enemy of good, and this is good. You can find hypocrisy or lack of perfectionism anywhere.
Fnoord
·15 dni temu·discuss
With usbip you can run a USB device remotely as if it is local. You could use this to, for example, access a printer remotely (Wireguard would also allow you this). I went for fiber in my home, through the walls mostly. Also still some legacy twisted pair (esp. PoE).
Fnoord
·15 dni temu·discuss
A more recent example would be Mark Carney's Davos speech [1], specifically "middle powers must act together because if we're not at the table, we're on the menu."

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Carney%27s_Davos_speech
Fnoord
·19 dni temu·discuss
A Danish privacy activist (not a protected title) using Google Nest.

On a second thought (addendum), ...

1) Publishing PII like phone number of a high profile person in your society is causing them harm since they obviously put effort into not having such out in the open. (e.g. I can find anyone's phone number in my country via leaks. No big deal... but I shouldn't publish such. I shouldn't possess such data either.)

2) SSN is a different category of PII. Publishing this of anyone is an invitation of harm, even more so of a high profile person in your society.

It is akin to inviting people to DDoS a website, or blocking them physically access to exit their house. That kind of thing. Except that on the internet, anyone can abuse this. Even people (including criminals) in foreign countries, residing in hazardous jurisdictions (e.g. Russia).

Either way, what's the point of publishing such information? When German activists published the fingerprint of a German minister, they were making a point. They got the fingerprint via a glass of wine, but the interesting point is that a fingerprint cannot be revoked. It isn't used to authenticate a password, but a user(name). It should therefore not be used as single factor.
Fnoord
·19 dni temu·discuss
If you're not paying Google, you're the product. Same with Facebook. Both of these companies are data mining/harvesting and advertising.

I'm also a Kagi user, but the index they mainly use is Google's. So I am paying for a good UI, a couple of nice features, and a frontend/proxy.

The only independent index I am aware of, is Mojeek.
Fnoord
·22 dni temu·discuss
I am a big fan of walking around in nature (even parks) enjoying nature sounds. It positively affects my mood. Bird sounds are my favorite, but while in bed I love the rain outside.
Fnoord
·22 dni temu·discuss
You already got a good reply, but I can maybe add n+1 and some details:

It works similar, but requires some effort to get working (if you already self-host its peanuts think Frigate plus reverse proxy and I also use Wireguard to have it available from outside). My home connection is fiber 1 gbit, but with DSL (only 30 mbit upload) it worked fine, too.

Since I want to decrease my reliance on US cloud, I like to self-host. I also still rely on Unifi APs and the doorbell. Right now I wouldn't spend money on building a self-hosted server, given prices.

I should mention I use iGPU via SR-IOV on a VM. The Google Coral sits in the device unused.

I also immediately copy the stream to an offsite backup. This way, if I get coerced to destroy my doorbell feed, I will happily oblige.
Fnoord
·22 dni temu·discuss
> With face detection? License plates? Tamper protection?

I do that with my Unifi Protect doorbell. RTSP streams. Google Coral. Frigate. Scales very well. Do ML on low quality stream. Look/save the high quality stream. You do it all centralized, and you can put the camera(s) on a seperate VLAN. They don't even need internet access. If you run them over PoE twisted pair, the attacker would need physical access to perform MITM. Wireless, one should assume the camera is insecure (e.g. KRACK).
Fnoord
·24 dni temu·discuss
Still, it is useful to mention.

If PoE required: use copper twisted pair.

If both sides SFP+ (preferred, but not always possible):

Physical presence: DAC (very cheap).

Not physical presence (e.g. has to go through wall, floor, or longer distance): fiber (OM3 are very cheap but apparently the color being translucent is regarded as nice).

Else: copper twisted pair.

I've applied this on my (rental) house. One server has a 10 gbit copper twisted pair NIC because it also has a PCIe switch with M.2 storage on the same physical PCIe board. Two WLAN APs are powered by switch in fusebox. The Unifi Protect appliance is also powered by twisted pair copper. But I was also able to get an OM3 fiber through the same wall hole.

And always terminate at walls. So if a cable in house goes bad, the one through the wall or the socket is unaffected. Works with both fiber and twisted pair copper.

You can already notice it in this post. DAC barely is part of the content. It is fire and forget, no caveats, lowest latency and lowest power usage. So it tends to be forgotten, but a DAC cable is useful if both devices got physical (vicinity) presence. An alternative could be networking over TB.