There are wave lengths that you cannot perceive, like, I don’t know… UV, maybe?
Definitely Signals Music Studio. Really great guy and an excellent guitar teacher for harmony and song writing stuff.
He puts out a lot for free so I feel more than justified to send some money his way - his teaching has been instrumental (heh) for my progress and understanding of music.
You need to check out public key cryptography and digital signatures. Those are the basics of Fido.
When the private key is bound to a device it is not possible to fake or steal it through conventional methods. Passwords are the weakest link and an easy target for attackers - passkeys basically solve that.
User adoption depends on implementation, but everything is easier than remembering a secure password or using a password manager for most people. There needs to be an easy and secure way to distribute passkeys across devices, and any backup mechanisms may be a weak point. In any case: still better than passwords.
I had a colleague at work years ago who did his Master’s thesis on network scanning. He ran a PoC in the company’s network and had all the printers print hundreds of pages.
We learned that printers suck and that we should always know our payloads and targets 😁
Check out openvas.
https://github.com/greenbone/openvas-scanner
I use Nessus professionally, they are somewhat similar. I can’t decide which one has the worse user interface.
I’m a big fan of hashcat for this use case myself! I route it through WS, however. I like being on the bleeding edge.
Jia Tan is most definitely not a person, just the publicly facing account of a group of people.
What is the trail of crumbs? Just some random email accounts?
This was in a big part a social engineering attack, so you can’t really avoid contact.
Caring about the technology of an app more than about its privacy is really strange to me, but you do you.
You can collaborate on WhatsApp or Signal as well, both messengers are using the end-to-end encrypted Signal protocol. Even in group chats. Telegram is not E2EE per default.
Of course, with WhatsApp Meta collects all your metadata so they have a very detailed network of basically all the people in this world… At least without all their messages.
Messages are only end-to-end encrypted if you use the Secure Messaging option. Otherwise everything passes the server in cleartext.
That means that anyone with access to those servers can read your messages.
Telegram is a security disaster.
Sooo… What exactly changed about the service?
You are awesome!
I use them for security assessments and completely agree with the other person. I find Chrome so unintuitive and ugly compared to Firefox.
They are not just middlemen, they control the entire sales platform - both buyer and seller.
And for the full Linux experience do it at the perfect moment, such as when you’re in a lecture or customer presentation!