Tech Freedom

Weekend Edition 55: Security, Elonworld, SBF Trial, and More…

Weekend Edition 55: Security, Elonworld, SBF Trial, and More...

Weekend Edition 55: Security, Elonworld, SBF Trial, and More…

 

NSA Top 5 Security Problems

Qakbot Ransomware not Dead Yet

ElonWorld: X Sued, Neuralink Competitor Gearing Up

Bankman-Fried Trial News

AI News

AWS and Azure to Be Examined by UK Competition Authority

Apple Fixes Their Shit

Duck Duck Go: We Were a Contender…

 

WE 1 – NSA’s Top 5 Corporate Cybersecurity Issues

The nation’s top spying agency has released its top 5 list of knuckle-dragging IT screw-ups they’ve found in corporate America.

The top bonehead, come-on-I-know-enough-to-do-better-than-that, mistake that the NSA found was failing to change default settings on new hardware and software. Usually these defaults are public knowledge, regularly posted to maufacturer or developer websites, not to mention countless forums and blogs. If you have yet to change your default logins, you owe it to yourself to figure out how and at least do that. This is basic, guys.

Number two on the derp list is not handling your permissions properly. Here’s the situation: you have a large network, with in-house servers, a hundred or more workstations, a couple dozen printers, routers, switches, firewalls (well maybe not that, if you can’t even manage to set up accounts properly), and WiFi access points, but you unwittingy set up all accounts as administrators, so that you don’t have so much management to do on the network (maybe?). This, in a Microsoft environment, is a recipe for a security disaster. As administrators, these users have full access to change settings, install and uninstall programs and hardware, not to mention opening your network to all manner of attack vectors. Only your IT guys (and perhaps not even all of them) should have administrator privileges. Not John and Jane Doe in the cubicles, they don’t need that much power in your network.

Number three is slightly less basic, but even at that, it, if your IT guys have a clue what they are doing as network admins, should be a slam dunk. It has to do with proper network monitoring inside your network. This is like setting up a secure area, but imagining that you don’t need security cameras to enhance surveillance in that space. Put the effort in. Install the cameras and the monitors, as well as sufficient on-premise storage to manage the logs in question. These logs can save your life, figuratively, when you do eventually get attacked, that way you can trace the vector for the attack, and patch that vulnerability.

Number four is another network basics issue: not segmenting your network(s) into vlans and the like, so once an attacker gets in past the initial wall, they just have clean access to ransack the whole place without anything else to stop them. If you segment your network(s), they will at least have to figure out where their targets actually live and work through more (even if they may be basic) firewalls in order to access their chosen targets. It may buy you enough time, if you have solid enough internal networking monitoring (and staff) to stop them before they get to anything really sensitive. However, if you don’t have that in place, then the likelihood is high that you have not segmented your network(s), either, and you’ll be that much more screwed in the inevitable event of a successful cyber attack against your company.

Number 5 has to do with patching vulnerabilities and other issues. If you do not have a coherent patching system, then you’re likely to miss a workstation here, or a server there when you find the need to patch your system (which should be regularly, as criminals are always shifting their vectors and methods of penetrating your system). If not everything gets patches at once, you will have blind spots and weaknesses that you thought were handled effectively, but were not. Make sure that your IT plans have comprehensive patching as a feature, that way you are less likely to miss things.

The list was actually a top 10, so here are the rest:

Bypass of system access controls

 

Weak or misconfigured multifactor authentication (MFA) methods

 

Insufficient access control lists (ACLs) on network shares and services

 

Poor credential hygiene

 

Unrestricted code execution

 

Numbers six and ten both tie back into number two, as if user accounts are set up with proper permissions, you are less likely to have someone able to inappropriately bypass access controls, and certainly wouldn’t be able to just run random code on one of your workstations. MFA and credentials are huge issues, and you may be tempted to think that just because you have MFA set up in your organization that it will save you from bad passwords which are easily brute-forced, but poor MFA (such as strictly basing it on SMS or email) can lead to MITM (man in the middle) attacks, as both of those things can be snooped or hacked into and redirected if an attacker is determined enough. A better way to approach MFA is to use something like Aegis or Authy to handle those codes, rather than simply trusting SMS to do it safely. This will cut down on many illegitimate access headaches for you. ACLs are related to number four, the network segmentation issue, as well as number two, the administrator access for all users issue. ACLs, when set properly, will keep resources safe from attack, as well as keeping one department’s resources separated from another department. This should be basic network engineering design, but apparently, corporate IT doesn’t get it, or perhaps, the management of the company doesn’t understand the need for these things, thus will not allow their IT team to set things up properly because it would be too inconvenient. I don’t know.

https://www.pcmag.com/news/nsa-here-are-the-dumbest-cybersecurity-mistakes-we-see-at-large-organizations

 

WE 2 – Qakbot Ransomware Still a Thing…

Now we are being warned that the Qakbot RaaS (Ransomware as a Service) infrastructure is not dead yet. Always reminded of Monty Python when I see that phrase… Lol. The FBI tried to take it down, but apparently only took out the botnet’s command & control servers, not completely destroying it. This is what leads the researchers at Cisco to believe that Qakbot may not 100% dead. It has still been sending out emails with links to download the Ransom Knight/ Cyclops ransomware, rather than Qakbot itself. Some other researchers have questioned that this is still Qakbot, insisting that it is rather something separate which seems to use former members of that botnet for something else entirely. As I said in the first piece today, criminals are always shifting their methods so that it is harder to catch them. After all, the gang behind Qakbot was not apprehended, but the C&C servers running the botnet were taken over and shut down by the FBI back in August (wait, you mean they aren’t just hyper-focusing on Trump and his supporters? They are actually doing some reasonably useful things as well?). We shall see if this is Qakbot or something else entirely in the coming days and weeks. Be careful with emails guys, always, always check that something actually came from the person that it allegedly came from. Do not just randomly open attachments from people you don’t know, or even from someone you do know, if you weren’t expecting to receive an attachment from someone, make sure to touch base with them first. These attachments can and often do contain bits of nasty code which can make your machine a part of one of these botnets, not to mention putting your data at risk as well. If you check with the person and they sent it, you are probably ok to open it. If not, then please, don’t open it. These steps will save you and your IT guys much grief in the future. They will thank you for not just randomly opening emails from people you don’t know. Phishing attacks are one of the most common ways that pieces of malware find their way onto systems and networks. Take this warning seriously and help your IT team help you to keep your company’s assets safer.

https://www.pcmag.com/news/notorious-qakbot-botnet-threat-continues-despite-fbi-takedown

 

WE 3 – Elon World

3-1: X Sues X… No, Elon Isn’t Suing Himself…

No, the platform formerly known as Twitter isn’t suing itself. There is another extant social media platform called X which is suing Elon’s personal social media playground. The suit seeks relief, in the form of a permanent injunction against the giant around the name, since their platform, which exists to connect lawyers and their clients, is also known as X, and this name change on Elon’s part will lead, and has already led to a decline in users on that smaller, Florida-based platform. The Florida platform is known as X Social Media, and has been around since 2015. They say that they have invested (probably too much) in brand awareness and advertising over the last 8 years. Yet another reason why a single letter is not a good idea for a name for something that will be public-facing. Many other companies have claims on various related trademarks, whether logos or full on brands, from X Social Media, to Meta, to Microsoft. Elon is looking pretty room-temp in the IQ department, here. He should have done more research before making this jump, just because he always wanted a platform called “X” which could handle anything and everything someone might want or need to do online.

https://www.pcmag.com/news/x-sues-x-over-name-elon-musk-twitter

 

3-2: Neuralink Has Competitors?

Apparently they do. One of them, Precision Neuroscience, is building a factory in Dallas, TX as we speak. They are at roughly the same phase of the process as Neuralink is, that is, FDA permission for human trials. The co-founder and Chief Science Officer of Precision is a Neuralink alumnus, and sees this move as crucial for safe development (both in terms of industrial espionage and for the health and privacy of the people they seek to help) of their brain-computer interface technology. Some others in the space are Synchron, Paradromics, and Blackrock Neurotech. I’d never heard of anyone other than Neuralink in the space, but then the media is fixated on “wunderkind” Musk, so why would they give airtime to anyone else? After all, the media is controlled by the same people who created Musk. It sounds like Precision’s methodology is less invasive than Neuralink’s, which seems like a net-positive to me, if we are going to move forward with this step toward merging man with computers. That whole thing just feels like a non-starter to me. I don’t want all of my neural energy and signals read and processed by some datacenter somewhere, then spat into my computer or phone via an app. It’s all too damn invasive, I mean, I love technology as much as the next guy, but some things just should not be. Even Star Trek never dealt with this in a positive way… The closest thing I can recall were the Binars or the Borg. The Binars were at least relatively benign, where the Borg were more or less like a technological cancer of sorts, on a galactic level. No individualization (other than the Queen), and all thoughts within the collective were funneled toward the goal of expanding the collective. Just freaky. Not a fan.

https://www.cnbc.com/2023/10/05/neuralink-rival-precision-neuroscience-buys-factory-in-brain-implants.html

 

WE 4 – SBF BS: The Trial Has Begun

4-1: SBF Tried to Pay Trump to Not Run in 2024

SBF’s biographer (what the hell? A 30 year old gets a biography written?) claims that he tried to pay Trump $5 Billion to not run in the last election Let’s process this a bit shall we? He was brazen enough to float the idea to someone on Trump’s team, not just chat about it internally. He never really made the attempt for a couple of reasons, though, one, he was unsure of its legality, and two, FTX fell apart about a year ago now, so he went from being flush with cash to being more or less broke. Two very good reasons to not try to bribe someone to not run for office. Yes, this would have been bribery if he had gone through with it. Then, aside from that, the wheels fell off of his crypto lambo. We have talked about how he is accused of money laundering, wire fraud, and a litany of other things in the past, and we will rehash all that in a bit, as his first trial began on Tuesday, October 3. The writer, who met with him over 100 times in the last couple of years, is convinced that at least SBF didn’t really grasp the reality that he was living on customer funds. He claims that SBF is no Madoff. I’m still not convinced that most crypto isn’t fraudulent on its face, anyway. Well, no more fraudulent than fiat currency, that is just underpinned by the government. Well, let’s continue talking about this clown.

https://www.cnbc.com/2023/10/02/sam-bankman-fried-considered-paying-trump-5-billion-not-to-run-lewis.html

 

4-2: Trial 1: Start

SBF being charged with 7 things, which if he is convicted of all of them, he will net at least a 100 year sentence. Wow. We have covered this before, but let’s get into it again, shall we? So, he claims that he was unaware of all of this, but it looks like, that is pretty much a bald-faced lie…

The full list of charges are:

 

Conspiracy to commit wire fraud on customers of FTX.

Wire fraud on customers of FTX.

Conspiracy to commit wire fraud on lenders to Alameda Research.

Wire fraud on lenders to Alameda Research.

Conspiracy to commit fraud on customers of FTX in connection with purchase and sale of derivatives.

Conspiracy to commit securities fraud on investors in FTX.

Conspiracy to commit money laundering.

 

Now, all that said, the reason why he is being accused of these things is because he did indeed misuse customer funds, whether he was conscious of that fact or not. It was not only illegal to do so, but was against their own terms of service to use customer funds for anything without express consent from the owners of those funds. It smells really bad, even though we are supposed to be considering him innocent until proven guilty. That is hard when the evidence, even as someone who is a legal layperson, really strongly points toward guilt. We will see how many of these charges stick vs how many he is able to disprove somehow. I don’t know how likely I am to be able to present this impartially moving forward. His lawyers have their work cut out for them in more or less trying to argue from ignorance for SBF, however, the judge has already stated that that strategy would be a nonstarter in opening arguments. We’ll see how all this goes, he has another trial to look forward to, after this one wraps around Thanksgiving, next March, which will cover more charges made since his extradition.

https://www.cnbc.com/2023/10/03/sam-bankman-fried-criminal-trial-starts-today-heres-whats-at-stake.html

 

4-3: Who Might Testify?

SBF’s parents, ex-girlfriend, Anthony Scaramucci, a bunch of investors from FTX and others, including his brother. How was Mooch related to this? If you recall, he was momentarily a press secretary for the Trump admin, I think between Spicer and Huckabee-Sanders. FTX seems to have funneled resources to and through the Bankman-Fried family as a whole, SBF’s parents and his brother were at least semi-involved with all of this, whether simply receiving those resources in the form of money or property, or being more intimately involved with the operation of FTX. Caroline Ellison is the step daughter of Gary Gensler, who had been one of SBF’s professors, and is the current head of the SEC. She was the CEO of Alameda Research, as well as the on again, off again romantic partner for SBF. Mooch was an investor, friend, and business partner of SBF. Wow. No wonder Trump has had such strong words about BTC and crypto as a whole. Not saying that he was directly involved or even likely talked to SBF at any time while he was in office. However, Scaramucci was involved, at different times, with the Trump admin. Make of that what you will.

https://www.cnbc.com/2023/10/03/sam-bankman-fried-trial-witness-list-scaramucci-ellison-more.html

 

 

WE 5 – AI Nonsense

5-1: Google Assistant to Get Bard Soon

Hey Google! Sorry if I just triggered your phones or wiretap devices, all… But soon enough, the simpler AI of Assistant will get a boost via the injection of Bard into the system. That’s right, Assistant with Bard is coming soon, and will be able to do almost anything that you can do with Bard or ChatGPT, only within your Android device and the Assistant. It will be able to summarize missed emails, analyze pictures, and generate things for you based on text or voice prompts. I never got into any of the voice assistants, because they just never sat right with me and I also was never initially happy with their results. I wasn’t patient enough to train them effectively, so I always had parts of my phones which I never really touched. How many of you are like me in that way? If you want a decent speech to text engine which you can use to hook into your phone’s keyboard, try the Futo Voice Input app, you can find it on Fdroid, if you add the repository for it, or even on the Play Store. It is put together by a braintrust which is dedicated to open source and device repairability. If you are a fan of Louis Rossmann, you’ll appreciate this organization. I’ll drop a link below to the F-droid repository.

https://www.pcmag.com/news/google-assistant-is-getting-a-bard-generative-ai-upgrade

https://app.futo.org/fdroid/repo/

 

5-2: Copilot: Can It Run Windows For You?

This article kind of drools over the notion of ease of use in reference to the ever evolving cluster fuck that is Windows. Pardon my foul language. Windows has only gotten more and more complex over the years, and Copilot, once it has been iterated upon (assuming that it makes it through that process, which is not guaranteed, RIP Cortana) is intended to enable that kind of fluid interaction. Its stated goal is to “turn every user into a power user”. Perhaps I am an elitist, but I think that if you want to get good at something, dumbing it down and adding another layer of surveillance tech to the equation doesn’t seem like the way to do that. Why don’t we just make the interface simpler and cleaner, so that actions are intuitive, even for the youngest users, rather than adding AI to the mix? On the surface, and turning off the skeptic and cynical parts of my brain, this article makes a valid point. I do want something akin to Jarvis, only without Big Brother watching my every action in excruciating detail, then making itself smarter at my expense. Is there a way to have my cake and eat it, too? I don’t know. I can dream, though. The only way I can see this happening is if everyone had the ability to self-host their own AI models. That is an exceptional amount of computing power, know-how, and overall power consumption that would be necessary for the whole population to have access to tools like that. I also question the impulse in that direction, though, because as much as it could make life easier and create moments of lower friction for creativity to flow, is that always a good thing? I don’t know. What do you guys think?

https://www.cnet.com/tech/services-and-software/copilot-may-mean-never-having-to-learn-windows-ever-again/

 

WE 6 – AWS and Azure to Be Examined by the UK CMA

I talked about the possibility of this referral coming months ago, and salivated over it, while simultaneously lamenting the need for a government large enough to smash mega corporations if need be. I am a ball of contradictions on this topic. I admit it. However, I feel like Big Tech needs to be taken to school. Maybe even behind the woodshed. They have become abusive to us because we allowed them to by continuing to utilize their products and services like a bunch of mindless sheep. They take advantage of us by offering cheap, relatively easy entry ways into the world of cloud computing, but then making it hard to leave their walled gardens. This is wholly unfair to us as consumers, as well as to other innovative businesses which may be better for us as a whole, even if they may not be as initially frictionless as the Azures and AWSs of the world. As they figure it, in the UK, AWS and Azure cover 60-70% of the market for cloud services, and even Google is dwarfed in comparison, at a mere ~11-21% of the UK market. Those are eye-popping numbers. The CMA is concerned that this represents too much concentration of power in the hands of too few, which is rarely good for anyone in the long run. They will carefully examine the situation, and we can expect a report with their findings and potential fines and whatnot by early 2025. I hope that the UK smashes these giants with an aptly sized hammer, not just levies fines against them, as is the typical turn of events in cases like this. We shall see. What is your take on these issues? Is it good to have government big enough to push around trans-national corporations like Microsoft and Amazon? Should MSFT and AMZN have ever gotten to where they are in terms of market share? I’m not questioning the quality of their cloud platforms, just the ways in which they maintain their grip on the businesses and individuals which see no alternative other than to depend on them.

https://www.cnbc.com/2023/10/05/amazon-and-microsofts-cloud-dominance-referred-for-uk-competition-probe.html

 

WE 7 – Apple Shenanigans

7-1: Apple Fixes Their Shit

iOS 17.0.3 was released to fix some of the overheating issues with the iPhone 15 series of devices. If you listen to or watch the show, here is where Connor will start his rant about how stupid some of their “fixes” have been in the latest updates.

This article tries to comfort people about how hot their phones have been getting lately, echoing Apple that it doesn’t have anything to do with the new materials used, and that unless there is a warning about heat on the screen, the devices are safe to use. Ignore that burning sensation in your hands and the acrid scent of char-grilled fingertips wafting up from your lightly smoking, $1000+ status symbol. They try to pin the extra heat on poorly optimized apps, or the restore process, but insist that the updates they pushed out this week are bug fixes to reduce that extra heat on your wholly unnecessary updated iPhone status symbol. That is why I call them status symbols: they are overpriced for what they do, and unless you have one from 4+ years ago, currently, you don’t NEED a new one. Stop mindlessly consuming, just because Apple says you should.

https://www.cnbc.com/2023/10/04/apple-iphone-15-overheating-fix-released-in-ios-update.html

 

7-2: DuckDuckGo: Apple Almost Switched to Us…Really Guys.

As a part of the antitrust trial against Google, the founder and CEO of DuckDuckGo testified that Apple was much closer to switching default search engines than anyone outside knew. There were a series of 20 calls or meetings between 2016, when Weinberg first pitched the idea, and 2019, when Apple finally ended the conversation. Weinberg always felt that at least on his side, these talks always went well, but that the standing contract with Google was the primary deal breaker for the partnership moving forward, even just for private mode searches within Safari. They also pitched to Samsung, Mozilla, and Opera, but time and time again, felt stymied by the extant agreements all of them had with the 800lb gorilla. Apple executives remember things a bit differently, though. One, who also testified, was concerned with the link to Microsoft (as DDG uses the Bing indexes) as an Achilles’ heel for the whole thing, an incongruence with the way that they presented their product. I used to use DDG. Used to love it. Then it went woke and started tampering with results. If I am going to use a search engine, I don’t want it to feed me ads or what its creators think I should want to see, but just what I ask to see. If DDG does not provide that, then I don’t care so much about its vaunted privacy focus, because its whole MO is eroded by the way that their algorithms tamper with my search results. I think that testimony like this will lead to heavy fines, if not potentially a Ma Bell situation with Google. I want to see it splintered in to a thousand, tiny pieces, and prevented forever from reintegrating in to its previous state. That is likely too much to ask, but a boy can hope, can’t he?

https://www.cnbc.com/2023/10/05/duckduckgo-ceo-testified-about-talks-with-apple-to-replace-google.html 

Weekend Edition 54

Weekend Edition 54: More AI Shenanigans, Elon World, and Internet for all?

Weekend Edition 54 – AI Shenanigans and Community Internet

 

SpaceX Now Has Military Comms Contract

AI Shenanigans with Bard, ChatGPT, the CIA, and More

FCC & Net Neutrality: Part ?

FTC Suing Amazon

X Axes “Election Integrity”

Community Internet Access

 

WE 1 – SpaceX Nets US Mil Comms Contract

Just what Elon needed, another gov’t contract. If it weren’t for gov’t contracts and corporate welfare, he would be a broke side note because his “inventions” and “innovations” are mostly crap when evaluated on their own merits. If you couldn’t tell, I’m tired of talking about this clown and his “achievements”. I see him as a creation of the deep state who vacillates in his opinions and actions depending on which way he senses the wind blowing. I do not trust him worth a damn. I used to want a Tesla, now whenever I see someone driving one, my first thought is, “well, there’s another sucker”. But I digress. This contract is actually relatively small in Musk terms… Only up to $70 million for a siloed communications platform based on Starlink technology. What else is involved? We don’t really know. Is Starlink up to the challenge for providing military grade communications? I don’t know. These feels like a PR move, to me. Back to my initial point, though, this feels like the DOD saving one of its creatures because Starlink is not profitable yet, and with as high end of a client as the DOD, it seems like that would add prestige to the company and encourage people to give it a shot. Personally, I don’t get the drive toward satellite communications methods, when they are necessarily farther away than terrestrial options, introducing more latency to the connection. Just dumb.

https://www.pcmag.com/news/spacex-wins-pentagon-contract-to-supply-military-communications 

 

WE 2 – AI Shenanigans This Week

Bard conversations have started to be indexed by Google Search. What did you think would happen when you feed the search giant more information, anyway? Use your brains, people. If it makes shareable links to your “conversations” with Bard, then why wouldn’t the Google Search crawler grab those links and put them into its search results list? Let’s use our brains, people. Google claims that they are working to stop that from happening in the meantime, but why take the chance, anyway? These chat bots are a privacy nightmare to begin with, “Thanks, Microsoft!” (sarcasm) Remember, Microsoft was the one who threw data gathering caution to the wind about a year ago when it heavily invested in OpenAI. They decided that security and privacy were secondary concerns to just getting ChatGPT out into the wild ASAP, and could be “dealt with later”. Do you value your privacy that little? Are convenience and expediency that important to you that you are willing to give that much more data to our would-be tech overlords (not to mention the 3-letter agencies which gave them life originally)? You may be thinking, “I don’t have anything to hide. I haven’t done anything wrong.” Well, have you ever searched for truth on the internet? Tried to dig into election interference claims? Questioned the Narrative? These are online actions which get you “noticed”. You may be on a list or two, already. You may not have been de-platformed or de-banked, but many have been. Choose to learn the best ways to move forward with privacy as a primary concern, and let me tell you, using these chat bots ain’t it, Chief. It is time to get away from MS products with Co-Pilot (aka ChatGPT) built into the OS and accompanying software. It is time to ditch Google for everything, unless you are willing to encrypt every file you upload there (which would do nothing for your emails and search histories), so just find alternatives, ideally through self-hosting as much as you can. It is time to get away from Apple (not that my co-host is doing so, but yeah… He’s a walking oxymoron, a privacy wonk who uses Apple because it is pretty and “just works”, even though they snoop on all your data) for the same reasons… When you trust them with your data, it is private from everyone but Apple, kind of like with the MS ecosystem. Except, with MS, there is no such thing as security, as Windows, and the rest of their ecosystem, is so full of security holes that you’re lucky if you find something that is actually protected well.

https://www.pcmag.com/news/be-careful-with-bard-google-search-showing-private-chatbot-snippets

Guess what? The CIA is now developing own AI tools that we are allowed to know about now. Oh boy. Yes, they need AI to help them and the rest of the USIC (US Intelligence Community) to sort through all of the data they gather from US citizens (thanks, W!) You, if you are an AI researcher, could get a job helping the Devil to spy on the rest of us and parse that info into something more useful for them. Doesn’t that just sound like a utopian vision? Try 1984 to the max. They have the surveillance apparatus trained on us already, but particularly for those of us who are not wise to their games at all, that just looks like playing in the Big Tech sandboxes, as usual. You can foil some of their data gathering by using tools like encrypted DNS and no-log VPNs, but aside from that, if you MUST use spy OSes and software, stick them in virtualized environments, where they can only see and communicate if you allow them to, vs taking all your telemetry and phoning home constantly to report on you, like some sort of Stasi or KGB or CIA informant. If this feels like allot of work, it is, but thanks to the Patriot Act and others since then, our personal privacy is no longer guaranteed in this country. Is it worth a bit of work to clamp down on the firehose of data that you volunteer to Big Tech and the 3-letter agencies by using Big Tech tools? I think so. If all of us woke up and stopped making it easy on them to mine our data, then I think we would make a big impact.

https://www.pcmag.com/news/bard-chatgpt-and-the-cia-us-agency-prepping-its-own-chatbot

 

Now you can allegedly tell Bard to fuck off from your website without harming your SEO rankings on Google Search. The tool is called Google-extended, and you can modify your robots.txt file on your website with the following string to tell it to buzz off:

User-agent: Google-Extended
 Disallow: /

Will it work? I don’t know. I will be implementing it on my websites though, since I do not want these stupid bots getting any smarter reading my content, then using it to cobble together some answer to someone else’s query. No thanks. My sites don’t have paywalls anyway, but I want credit for whatever marginally original thoughts I may have, and being spat into some database doesn’t offer that. Call me old fashioned, but if 242 of the top 1000 websites have already implemented the ChatGPT version of this string, then why not me? I know, odd that I would make any appeal to popularity like that, but there it is.

https://www.pcmag.com/news/dont-want-google-to-use-your-website-for-ai-training-you-can-now-opt-out

 

Here we go again… ChatGPT can easily browse the internet again. Enterprise and Plus users can now use Browse with Bing in the Bing Chat window. It had been rolled out, but due to abuse by some users, and outcry from creators and stakeholders whose material behind a paywall had been illegitimately accessed through the tool. Seems like this was inevitable. We know that these AI models can get around paywalls, and that there have been lawsuits about that capability, yet MS/ OpenAI is continuing on with this, even doubling down. I know that Connor and I have opposing opinions about intellectual property and the like, but this just seems stupid, unless MS figures that they have enough data gathered over the last 25 years on all gov’t officials that they don’t need to worry about negative rulings being particularly effective or brutal. They say that it will also be rolled out for free users soon as well.

https://www.engadget.com/chatgpt-is-allowed-to-browse-the-internet-once-again-211332316.html

 

Meta, not to be outdone, has created 25 AI personalities of famous people, from Snoop Dogg to Bear Grylls, and many in between. Now these personalities are not specifically clones of the real person, but based on the real person and tied to specific interests. That is creepy AF to me. These AIs are apparently voiced by these celebrities, somehow. This just feel like desperation on the part of robot lizard boy, Zuck, to make everyone look at Meta again when the core platform is more or less dead. I don’t know. These bots will play characters who can directly pull search results from Bing. That just sounds like a bad thing to me. If I’m gonna talk to a chat bot, I’d rather it be a blank slate rather than have a gimmick personality tacked onto it. I can’t imagine that this is going to be well-received by the user base for Meta. Then again, I’m weird. I know that. Perhaps the younger set, whom this has been squarely targeted at, will be awed by having some of their favorite influencers (such as Mr. Beast) involved with the project. I hope not. Just stay away from this nonsense, guys. It may be kind cool on the surface, but do you really want to give even more data to Zuck than you already volunteer through using Meta, Instagram, WhatsApp, and Threads (who actually uses Threads, anyway?)? Ditch these platforms and use your brains for something more beneficial, please.

https://www.engadget.com/meta-is-unleashing-more-than-25-ai-chatbot-personalities-onto-the-world-181428710.html

 

WE 3 – FTC on Net Neutrality… Again

Rosenworcel, with her newly minted, imbalanced board at the head of the FCC, is looking to re-roll out the controversial regulations that were so important to the Obama administration and now to Depends’ so-called administration. What is Net Neutrality, and why do GOP/ conservative lawmakers and pundits hate it as we do? In brief, Net Neutrality makes broadband ISPs into something like phone companies, a utility. This exposes big money mega-corporations to regulations which they do not want to deal with. I’m not suggesting that anyone on either side of the aisle is more influenced by special interests than the other, here, that is not my point. DC politics is a nasty swamp which has very little to do with We the People anymore. That is 90% of our “representatives” on both sides of the legislative branch. My primary concern as a constitutionalist is when the bureaucracy creates more power for itself without consent from the governed. I believe that the government should be small, taxes should be low, if they exist at all, and regulations should be close to non-existent. However, that requires a moral, intelligent, and informed populace, which doesn’t really exist at scale right now. That is how we got where we are from Ben Franklin’s comment in response to what sort of government they created for the US, back in the 1780s, “A republic, if you can keep it”. Also how we have degenerated from John Adams’ famous quote that our constitution is “a government for a moral people, and is ill-equipped to govern any other.” Here we are, though. With companies big enough to be governments in their own rights, buying influence with senators, representatives, cabinet-level officials, and even presidents. Companies large enough to readily abuse everyone because they have near-monopolies on the tools and services that we have become dependent on in the present moment. I believe in the free market and that the free market is the most just way to handle the means of production that humanity has developed, therefore, I also believe that on a long enough timeline, governments should not need to be so big as to be tyrannical. However, in our current situation, government is unfortunately necessary to put these giants in their place from time to time, so that they do not become abusive to the point where the public is harmed by their practices (which could be argued to be the case right now). The banner rules for this set of regulations hinge on the FCC being able to force companies to keep their services “free of unnecessary impedance to the flow of data”, such as data caps, bandwidth caps for specific services or customers, and other such things, which are not really a super issue right now.

On the surface, like most of these regulatory efforts, that sounds rosy and hunky-dory, doesn’t it? If you dig down, the veneer is only deep enough to fool someone who just glances at the patch for the “problem”, though, and that is why people like me don’t see that it is a net benefit to be net neutral. The problem is that it centralizes too much more power in the hands of unelected officials, so they need means to police these regulations, which would give them even more access to data than they already have, and could snowball into more ability to shut down dissent in our country. Have we recently seen proof that (((they))) would do just about anything to maintain their power? Yes. Yes, we have. Why are the January 6 participants still being held in DC jails? Why are they having the book thrown at them when they did (mostly) nothing wrong that day? This could potentially turn into something really nasty for We the People. That is why I stand against it, from what I understand of it.

https://www.pcmag.com/news/fcc-prepares-to-take-another-swing-at-writing-net-neutrality-rules

 

WE 4 – FTC Sues Amazon, Claiming Monopoly

It’s about time. Amazon is too damn big. It uses dark patterns throughout its customer facing properties. It makes it hard for merchants to sell things elsewhere, particularly if they find that they could sell their wares for less elsewhere.They will bury those sellers’ listings beneath layers of Amazon house brands and other ads for related things, such that those sellers’ wares may as well not be on that marketplace. This seems like it should be an open and shut case, but then, like MS, AMZN probably has copious amounts of blackmail data on the people seeking to knock it down a few pegs. We will see what, if anything comes of this suit. How many mom and pop businesses have had to close down because drop shippers on Amazon undercut them? One could argue that this is progress, but if progress entails destroying the life’s work of many, then is it really worth it? I don’t buy it. That isn’t to say that I am not among the throngs of people who hold Prime memberships, and on whom Amazon has far too much shopping and search pattern data. I am a hypocrite on this one, because I do not yet see a viable alternative to the Amazon near hegemony, quasi-monopoly situation. Do I want one? Yes. Are there a few marketplaces which are trying to do that, I think so. However, none are there yet. I think Amazon should be broken up, just like Alphabet, Microsoft, and Apple should be. It should be splintered as AT&T once was, though that didn’t last all that long, as AT&T is probably bigger now than it was before the efforts of the FTC in the late 90s and early aughts.

https://www.pcmag.com/news/ftc-sues-amazon-claiming-e-commerce-giant-maintains-a-monopoly 

 

WE 5 – Engadget Whines About X Firing Election Tampering Team

Awww, poor leftists. Crying over Elon actually following up on what he promised when he took over Twitter almost a year ago. Yaccarino, who was hired about 6 months ago, promised that X would abide by the rules set forth by the EU regarding mis and disinformation, which they have found to be much larger issues on the platform than on others, such as Meta. X/Twitter is the wild west right now. I still think that Elon is trying to torch it. There are many things which do not make sense from a business standpoint, such as how he always runs his mouth on the platform. That is not a normal CEO thing, typically CEOs get insulated behind layers of gatekeepers and PR people. This is so that whatever the public sees from a high profile CEO is sanitized and en pointe, so that they don’t have to do damage control a’la LMG. I don’t want to throw gas on that pyre, but in brief, there were issues at LMG (Linus Media Group, which operates the Linus Tech Tips, Short Circuit, and other tech-related news channels on YouTube) surrounding the accuracy of their videos, as well as some company culture issues which have led to what should be a criminal investigation. Linus Sebastian, the founder and owner of the company, likes to run his mouth, and often gets himself into trouble doing so. This is very similar to Elon’s approach with X/Twitter at this point. I don’t need to repeat my take on him from earlier in the blog, so suffice to say that I do not trust him worth anything. I think that he pulled the plug on these teams because he knew that they were ultimately bad for users. So, good on him for that. That’s where I’m going to leave this one…

https://www.engadget.com/x-reportedly-cuts-half-of-its-election-integrity-team-091135783.html

 

WE 6 – Mesh Internet: Achievable Goal or Unobtainable Pipedream?

First, we should probably define some terms, as mesh may not be a common idea. A mesh network is by nature decentralized, which grants it resiliency. Instead of a traditional ISP situation, a mesh-based provider has multiple points of ingress and egress, which means that if one point goes down, traffic is shuttled to another hub or switch, whereas if something happens to your fiber optic line in the street, you could be out of luck for weeks, as my co-host has been experiencing. If he was working with a mesh provider, such as one like NYC Mesh, then he would still get solid service, and it would almost certainly cost less. Given, he is not in NYC, but this could, at least in part, solve some of the issues he’s had over the last month or so. It involves low-cost, point to point directional WiFi transmitters and receivers to link the nodes of the mesh network. There are other similar organizations in Philly, LA, and Portland which have similar goals, which are to serve under-served communities with solid, unlimited broadband access. The more I look at this, the more apparent it is that they intend to create an open MAN, or Municipal Area Network, only without direct reference to the city of New York. This puts them in the crosshairs for AT&T, Verizon, Comcast, Spectrum, and the rest of the ISP mafia which serves NYC, along with much of the rest of our nation. These companies see community projects like NYC Mesh as existential threats to their hegemony over internet access. This breeds much animosity because thousands of people per day (hard to tell how many exactly, since they do not gather personal data on their users) choose to access the internet via their mesh network rather than through those companies’ pipelines (at least directly). I can see how this is difficult to execute on for long term situations, as it is dependent on volunteers and on the main ISPs in the area to not shut it down whenever they realize that it is happening, via cutting off access for the main nodes or some other such draconian measure.

This also sounds like a security nightmare, since unless you are hardlining into your access node, it is just a giant WiFi access point network. That gives me a cold sweat thinking about it. However, if you, as a home user for a mesh access situation like Mesh NYC are intelligent and bring that goodness into your home via a personal router, then to ideally a separate access point for your network, and you set up a VPN and encrypted DNS for it, along with firewalls to keep your devices connected with the other devices on the MAN-type mesh network, but safe from prying eyes. That moves this from doable for the average bear to needing some sort of network engineer to adequately get safely connected. Maybe I am jumping the gun here, but in looking more closely at the documentation for Mesh NYC, I see that the mesh is really not about point to many type scenarios, but rooftop to rooftop, rooftop to hub, and hub to hub connections. Once installed outside, a GBe connection is established to an inside router for the user’s personal network, which they can have be as complex as they want. The main thing that NYC Mesh asks is that those end user private networks keep guest networks open. That makes me nervous, but if you set it up right, you could pass that onto neighbors as you might with a traditional connection (as a failback option for them, should their own traditional connections fail). That said, I feel a bit better about the whole scenario, here, from a security standpoint. Still seems very nerd-oriented, and there aren’t as many nerds in the populations that they claim to want to help the most with this. Sorry if this has been a bit random, but was writing as I read things. Take a look at the docs for NYC Mesh here, if you are interested: https://docs.nycmesh.net/

https://www.cnet.com/home/internet/features/internet-for-the-people-the-movement-for-affordable-community-led-broadband/ 

Weekend Edition 52: AI Hype, Arm IPO, Security, Etc.

Weekend Edition 52: AI Hype, Arm IPO, Security, Etc

Airbus Hacked

Mullvad Warns About MacOS Sonoma

NSO Group Spyware Appears on Russian Journalist’s iPhone

China Denies Banning iPhones

ARM IPO

Google Play Scans in Realtime Now

Win11 to Protect Enterprise Passwords Better

Starlink: Going Broke?

AI Luminaries Testify Before Congress Again

 

WE 1 – Airbus Got Hacked… Oops

Hudson Rock, one of the big names in the cyber security space announced that hacker “USDoD” managed to exfiltrate (steal) data from the major French aerospace company, Airbus. Hudson Rock did not learn of this through some form of forensic investigation, but through crawling through hacker forums online, where the hacker had made the claim that they had made this attack. They managed to steal employee and vendor contact information through a compromised account connected with a Turkish airline employee. This is a common threat vector, to infect an employee’s account with information-stealing malware, then sell that gathered info to someone else on the black market, who then carries out a more direct attack on the target. In this case, it looks like the employee likely downloaded a compromised pirated version of .Net and was infected by the RedLine malware, which then grabbed about 3200 contacts related to Airbus, then the hacker connected to the initial attack sold it to someone else, who directly hit Airbus.

This hacker, “USDoD” claims to have carried out a similar attack on the FBI’s Infraguard database system, which hosts information about roughly 80,000 people, ranging from business leaders, IT Pros, LEOs, military members, and government officials. Ain’t that just grand? They (we do not know if this hacker is male or female at this time) appear to have joined an emerging ransomware group. We will see what happens and develops from that partnership. We need to stay on top of these sorts of attack vectors, as according to this article, it they are an increasingly popular option for hackers. How can we do that?  Try to make sure that our end users don’t expose themselves to unnecessary risk by installing pieces of software and whatnot which are unvetted, such as that instance of .Net which led to the attack on Airbus. How can we guard against this? As an IT guy, my gut says that centralization is a valid answer, but it is difficult to completely lock that down for end users, and also generates more work on the front end, as well as ongoing for IT professionals. I know, it sounds like I’m being lazy, and perhaps I am, but why would I willingly volunteer for potentially exponentially greater levels of that sort of work, moving forward? I’m not that much of a masochist. Do I see any other real alternatives, though? Not sure.

https://www.securityweek.com/airbus-launches-investigation-after-hacker-leaks-data/ 

 

WE 2 – Mullvad Privacy Company Warns of Problems with MacOS Sonoma

Mullvad discovered that the latest versions of MacOS have a critical flaw in their firewall implementation which breaks the popular privacy app. This also breaks many other VPN services, such as PIA and NordVPN, but ProtonVPN appears to be unaffected. The flaw appears to be related to packet filtering, so if your VPN or other network security tools do not require it in order to work properly, then you are probably fine. My personal take is that this was a shot across the bow for any Apple user who wants a modicum of privacy or security. This may be a mountain-molehill situation for me because I more or less hate Apple. I admit my bias, here, and if you have read or heard my commentary in the past, you know that. On the other hand, I was talking to Connor about this story and he has a significantly less cynical take on it. He sees this as more of a “happy accident” kind of thing, vs a calculated attempt to limit user privacy on Apple’s part. I don’t know. Not close enough to the developer space to have an educated opinion on the situation. Connor found a reddit thread about the situation where some users were saying that it had already been worked out. Maybe this is a fireless smoke situation, but time will tell, and I will follow up on this after the new version of MacOS actually hits the streets.

If you didn’t know, Mullvad is a privacy wonk’s wet dream. Connor will likely extol its benefits during the show, but know that it is not a paid spot or anything, just a couple of privacy-aware nerds geeking out over this really cool, open source focused privacy provider. They do not offer a subscription option, though you can pay ahead for as long as you want, at about $5.50/ month in cash, via credit card, or even BTC. The reason they do not do subscriptions anymore is that they do not want to keep any personally identifiable information from their users on hand. They are also 100% logless (which is crucial for any truly private VPN, because if they keep your logs on hand, they know exactly where, what, and when you have been online, and they could sell that info or even be hacked, then how private is that data, really?). Their servers are also 100% based on RAM, not permanent storage, which means that if the power is cut or the hardware is restarted, there is no data anymore. I used them for a month, and Connor, I think, has them in his personal privacy arsenal still, and enjoys/ appreciates them. As I said above, he’ll probably gush over them in the show, and I can’t entirely guess how that will go.

https://www.pcmag.com/news/mullvad-vpn-warns-of-critical-firewall-flaw-in-apples-macos-sonoma 

 

WE 3 – Pegasus Spyware Used Against Exiled Russian Journalist

Here are the basic details:

Galina Timchenko, the exiled head of an indie journalism outfit which has been critical of Putin and his administration had her iPhone hacked back in February according to Citizen Labs.

Apple notified her of the attack back in June.

It was a tapless infection which apparently occurred during a private meeting in Berlin, with other exiled Russian independent media types.

It used an exploit called “PwnYourHome”, which was patched earlier in the year.

This is the first reported Pegasus attack against a Russian journalist.

No one seems willing to point a solid finger at which State in the area might be responsible, though it seems likely that it was Russia, who banned her media company back in January.

Ok, so let me weave this story just a bit:

First, in January of this year, the Kremlin officially banned Ms. Timchenko’s organization, Meduza in Russia, citing national security concerns. In February, there was a private meeting in Berlin between exiled Russian independent media company heads. Ms. Timchenko was present at that meeting, and at some point during those proceedings, her iPhone was infected with Pegasus spyware (whose parent company, NSO Group, based in Israel, has ties with US Ret. Maj. Gen. Michael Flynn), through a click-less exploit, called “PwnYourHome”. There are several former Soviet Bloc countries in the area, including her host state of Latvia, who have licenses to use Pegasus and have no ethical qualms with using it, but none of them have been conclusively linked to this first-reported attack. Apple did notify her of the hack back in June, at which time she got in touch with Citizen Lab, an EU watchdog group. They did forensics on it, and uncovered the use of the Pegasus malware. Apple has since patched that vulnerability. The article ends with a suggestion to anyone who fears that their phone may have been compromised (any more than it already as as an Apple human tracking device) to place it in “lockdown mode”, as that has been shown to limit malware’s access to the hardware and its data.

Lockdown mode greatly reduces the convenience factor of your iPhone, iPad, or MacOS computer by making it so most Messages attachments cannot be downloaded, links cannot be clicked or previewed, Safari will largely break, Incoming FaceTime calls will be blocked, No more shared Albums in Photos, No more cross-device connections with other Apple products without explicit permission, so syncing photos and whatnot is right out when any of your devices is in lockdown mode. This all makes lots of sense, because most malware wants to spread itself to other devices and individuals, and once it does that, to gather private data from them and from your devices as well, of course. You don’t just randomly get targeted with Pegasus spyware, it basically has to be a State-level actor in order to afford it, so unless you are a vocal partisan, hacker, or some other sort of high profile source of pain for a governmental actor, you will probably be safe from this kind of interference. Perhaps Connor has some other thoughts about that, in fact, I imagine that he is probably saying, “Hold on a minute, Matt…” or something that right about now.

https://www.pcmag.com/news/nso-group-spyware-found-on-russian-journalists-iphone-who-put-it-there 

https://www.pcmag.com/how-to/how-to-secure-your-iphone-ipad-or-mac-with-lockdown-mode 

 

WE 4 – China Officially Denies Banning iPhone Use

The CCP’s Foreign Ministry has publicly denied that their government has “officially” banned iPhone and other foreign-branded devices from use at work by CCP officials. They stated that there has been no rule, law, or regulation passed in China which explicitly bans the use of those devices by government officials. They went on to indirectly mock the US’s stance on Huawei and other Chinese companies by stating that they, “… protect foreign companies’ rights and interests in accordance with the law and strive to foster a first-class market-oriented, law-based and internationalized business environment.” Shots fired, much? They sound like a jilted lover, pining over the relationship that once was, but is no longer. The article goes on to speculate, much like some sort of gossip rag or tabloid would, about the possible existence of an “unwritten rule” in this regard. This is possible, maybe even likely, but when the whole thing that we talked about last week was allegedly based on a pair of  “unnamed sources”, I have to question the reality of the whole scenario. Big side eye. X to doubt. I don’t know about you guys, but I’ve had enough of “news” being spun off from “unnamed/ anonymous sources, close to the situation”. So much nonsense has been created from spurious comments made by those sorts of people. Sure, there are moments when a whistle blower has be anonymous for personal safety, but I, for one, struggle with the printed libel and spoken slander that has been created to support false narratives about various public figures in this country. Time will tell if this is actually real or not.

https://www.pcmag.com/news/china-no-were-not-banning-iphones-for-government-workers 

 

WE 5 – Well, Well, Well… Arm Filed for an IPO

Let me start at square one here: do you guys know what ARM is? It is the company behind the architecture of the SOC (system-on-a-chip) processors which power most of the mobile world. It originally stood for Acorn RISC Machine (yes, named for the creator of the BBC Micro and Master retro computer systems from the 70s and 80s), but has shifted over the years to meaning Advanced RISC Machines. They went public with about 10% of their shares on Thursday, raising nearly $5 billion and netting a valuation of $54.5 billion. That is huge. SoftBank (Japanese investors) still hold 90% of the company’s stock. They are concerned, and even talked, about RISC-V as a potential threat to their hegemony in the chip IP world, should the open source architecture continue to gain traction and be capitalized at the rate it is. They should be worried. I love the idea of RISC-V and think that open source technology is the future in general. Notice that RISC is a feature in both of these architectures. What is RISC? It is one of two ways to handle logic and command structures in processors of various kinds, the other is called CISC, and is represented by the x86-64 lineages of processors, such as are featured in most desktop, laptop, and server computers today. CISC stands for Complex Instruction Set Computers. RISC stands for Reduced Instruction Set Computers. The philosophy behind the various RISC architectures is that simplicity is better and to be preferred over complexity. These (RISC) chips tend to be far more power efficient than their CISC brethren, but in the past were not as fast or as powerful as CISC chips, which is why so much of the computing world is predicated on the Intels and AMDs of the world, rather than on Arm or RISC-V. That, and the marketing for x86 processors has been much more forceful than Arm or its relatives over the years.

https://www.cnbc.com/2023/09/14/arm-ipo-what-is-risc-v-and-why-does-arm-call-the-rival-product-a-risk.html 

 

WE 6 – Play Protect Now Scans in Real Time

So, you know how the Play Store has a malware scanning facility for apps that have been uploaded to its servers, yeah? Well, it is about to gain the ability to scan your sideloaded apps for problems as well. This seems like a good thing on the surface, but when you look closer at this development, it feels like more overreach from the tech giant. Then, I am considered a power user, if not a technician of sorts, and certainly an enthusiast. I know that that provides a different perspective than it does or would for most average users. Forgive my cynicism, here, but when Google’s whole MO is to gather data on its users to sell to advertisers (at the least) and to serve as a database for the 3-letter alphabet agencies (at the worst), I struggle to see anything they do as a net-positive. I mean, perhaps for security this is a good thing, but privacy, i just don’t see it. Then again, I am a big degoogling guy, so maybe that colors my stance there. I’m not unreasonable on that front, but personally, I want to be as private as I can be and still hold onto some form of modern convenience. I’d rather not have a big tech outfit watching my every action like hawk to monetize it in some way. I think wisdom is to help users to develop discernment about the apps they choose to use, but that is probably too much to ask, so just like with the Airbus story earlier, a centralized solution is probably for the best for now, as much as that concentrates power in the hands of too few, just so that average people can thoughtlessly use their devices. The bottom line is that I do not trust any of the centralized options out there right now. I just don’t have a better alternative right now. That irks me greatly. We need something to replace this until people as a whole decide to learn a bit so that they can do better in defending themselves from threats.

https://www.techradar.com/phones/android/google-play-protect-is-upping-its-game-by-scanning-apps-in-real-time 

 

 

WE 7 – Windows Security *stifles laughter*

Microsoft is claiming that their enterprise clients can expect better password safety moving forward now. This update allows administrators to choose to block NTLM (New Technology LAN Manager) from connecting to systems via SMB (the Server Messaging Block, which allows file & print sharing on Windows networks) to prevent password cracking attacks. To be clear, this update does not completely block it, but rather prevents outbound connections to remote servers to stymie attackers attempts to steal the hashed user passwords on that system. This is a decently big deal in terms of Windows security, but when the OS is a rootkit in itself, I fail to see the purpose here. Perhaps I am too harsh on Microsoft, here, but I have my doubts. This is a decent step, but why is it being limited to only enterprise license holders? Oh yeah, they are the big money makers for Microsoft, so of course they would get the good stuff before the rest of us simple end users would. There are so many tweaks and whatnot that are locked to enterprise level licenses that the OSes almost may as well not be the same. I’m not saying that you should sink money into Microsoft’s ecosystem at all, though, those licenses are not cheap and are designed for Network and system administration professionals to set up and deploy across vast corporate landscapes, not Joe Blow PC user on Elm St. Personally, I think that all users should have at least a basic understanding of how their systems work, so that when something breaks, they have at least a basic toolkit to reach for to diagnose and repair it themselves. We lost that probably when the world decided that Windows was the future rather than something like BeOS or OS2. The process went from, “Oh, computers are just for nerds or gamers who know basic programming or hacking, to computers can be for everyone, and oh now we need a new class of technicians to fix these flawed, buggy, and oft-broken systems so that end users don’t need to know any of this stuff in order to use the computers we make”… Or something like that. That needs to be reversed. I know this is counter cultural, but let’s learn how to take responsibility for our things rather than simply simply using them until they break. That is one of my passions and informs all I do with Tech Freedom.

https://www.techradar.com/pro/security/microsoft-releases-windows-11-update-to-block-password-stealing-attacks 

 

WE 8 – Is Starlink Actually Solvent?

Short answer: yes it is. It is well short of its original projected numbers from when SpaceX first spun the project off, however, it is solvent. They projected 20 million users for the service, with a revenue of ~$12 billion and an operating profit of ~$7 billion by the end of last year. Those were typical, pie-in-the-sky Musk numbers, the reality is that they had about 1 million users, a revenue of $1.4 billion, and operating profit of something less than that, if not a loss. I don’t like Elon, and think that he has a slightly above room temperature IQ, but has suddenly become some sort of marketing genius. I doubt very much that he ever wrote a single line of good code for X (later PayPal), and has never done any real work in terms of design for Tesla or SpaceX. I think that perhaps he came up with the names for the vehicles, but other than adding mystique to the companies he owns by being an alleged autistic wunderkind and fabulously wealthy through US gov’t subsidies and other corporate welfare measures, I doubt that he has added much tangible value to the companies he supposedly owns. Change my mind without resorting to propaganda.

https://www.pcmag.com/news/starlink-is-popular-but-is-it-making-enough-money-to-stay-afloat 

 

WE 9 – AI “Luminaries” Testify Before Congress Again

In a closed session, former and current CEOs of Microsoft, Bill Gates and Satya Nadella, alleged tech wunderkind Elon Musk, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, Alphabet/ Google CEO Sundar Pichai, former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, Nvidia Chief Jensen Huang, and others spoke to a group of roughly 60 senators, headed up by Chuck the Schmuck (Chuck Schumer, the Senate Majority leader) on Wednesday. Elon spun it as potentially, “going down in history as very important for the future of civilization.” in a comment to a CNBC reporter just after the end of the meeting. The bottom line is that the legislators are trying to listen to big tech about this blundering monster that it has created by unleashing generative AI on the public before it was finished baking. Here’s looking at you, Microsoft, you greedy, data-grubbing monstrosity, you. You just couldn’t wait to mine all the more data with your freshly bought OpenAI tools, could you? Microsoft has created this insane rush to develop these AI’s by forcing Altman and company to release chatGPT to the public, arguably before it was ready. I don’t know, y’all. It seems to me that it would be simpler to have just practiced a modicum of patience around this issue, but they couldn’t help themselves, like a kid on Christmas morning, or a fat kid in a candy store (I was a fat kid, I can talk). Just pitiful, and now we are in a mess, where the government has to scramble to regulate this allegedly dangerous technology. I am still unconvinced that current generation generative AI platforms and their incredibly large datasets and algorithms are something we should be afraid of for the reasons that they say. I strongly caution against their use for privacy reasons, not because I am anywhere near convinced that we should fear them evolving into something that could take over the world. I never plan to use them at any point, if I can help it because of the inherent privacy issues presented by the technology, not to mention its penchant for “hallucinating” bad answers, or just completely missing the ball, so to speak.

https://www.cnbc.com/2023/09/13/musk-zuckerberg-among-tech-leaders-visiting-senate-to-speak-about-ai-.html 

Weekend Edition 51: Privacy, on the Rocks

Weekend Edition 51: privacy, on the rocks

Weekend Edition 51: Privacy, on the Rocks

 

US Officials Fake Social Media Accounts

AI Nonsense

Android TV Malware

New FCC Commissioner

CCP Bans Apple for Federal Employees

UK Encryption Woes

 

WE 1 – Feds Have Fake Social Media Accounts

This one is gonna be hard for me to not be sarcastic about, but then, I suppose that I am a conspiracy theorist… It has been shown recently, through research done by the Brennan Center (named for Obama’s C_A head, by the way), that the DHS, CBP, and ICE all use fake social media accounts to surveil possible illegal aliens who slipped past their nets at the border. This article really only explicitly names those agencies, but the theory is that it is far more widely practiced among other federal-level agencies. This was more or less confirmed in the Twitter and Facebook Files, which were at least partially released earlier this year. The reality there, though, was that these agencies did not need fake accounts in order to keep track of people. They had wide open back doors installed at the hearts of these organizations, which they frequently used. I digress, though. This piece is about the DHS, CBP, and ICE and their abuses of these popular social media sites. These measures are unconstitutional. We have the right to free speech in this country, as well as the right to freely assemble (digitally or physically), as well as the right to privacy. Now the criminals who are either looking to scam the system or who are actively doing so have no such rights. There is also a gray area for the social media companies who have policies which expressly prohibit such tactics, so it is an issue that they have allowed it to keep going. What do you guys think?

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/sep/05/us-immigration-homeland-security-social-media-fake-profiles

 

WE 2 – Greasy Nuisance Signs EO to Investigate AI’s Impact on CA

Gavin Newsome (aka Greasy Nuisance or Gov. Greaseball) is apparently jumping onto the fearporn bandwagon about the impact of AI. This idiot wouldn’t know his ass from a hole in the ground if someone didn’t show him the difference. So he is having State-level departments study it and draft a report for him over the next 60 days about the economic impact of the use of AI in CA, as well as how the government could potentially use it in the state. Lord have mercy, just what we need, a bunch of Sacramento mindless jerks studying and implementing AI in governmental settings. That’s what is likely to come next, instead of recorded messages in bureaucratic office phone systems, they’ll roll out some GPT-based generative AI solution to talk to to screw we the people over even more than the insane crap regulations that we have to wade through in order to get anything worthwhile done, here. Apparently he (Gov. Greaseball) felt the need to insinuate that generative AI could cause environmental and energy grid disasters which could lead to “mass casualty events”. Proof that this moron has been watching CNN and Fox News (lmao) too damn much. We need a governor who can think for himself, here in CA. That might rankle too many within the Sacramento machine, but it is what We the People need, just as much as We the People need to learn to unhook ourselves from the brain drain of the Media. Let’s all learn to think for ourselves, here, and not be mind controlled zombies anymore. Maybe he;s wondering how these sorts of things could be triggered via AI tools so that he could make it look like it was AI’s fault when he follows the Cabal’s orders re: depopulation. He may need some huge gesture for them to agree to installing him as Depends’ successor in the White House. He sure is Central Casting enough, if you catch my drift. He has also made moves in relation to the Presidency, many think that he has all but thrown his hat into the ring already. That would be a disaster for this nation. Even more than the current puppet-admin. He has put the icing on the destructive cake here in CA. We’ve tried to kick him to the curb a few times now, but as in the USSR, it isn’t the votes that count, but who counts the votes that counts. He and the machine which installed him here are the ones who always count those votes, so nothing changes. He’s a mindless empty suit who will do whatever people more powerful than he is tell him to.

https://www.pcmag.com/news/california-joins-the-ai-regulation-frenzy 

 

WE 3 – Microsoft Vows to Shield Users of Copilot from Litigation

Wow. Just wow. Now, this is just on offer for paying customers, not any old Joe Schmoe who uses BingAI to create something which infringes on someone’s copyrights. Specifically for paying customers of Office 365 who use Copilot, as well as enterprise users of BingAI. They claim that if those users are challenged on copyright grounds, Microsoft will assume any legal liability they incur through their use of Copilot AI. Wow. Big talk from Redmond, y’all. I wonder when they’ll be put to the test first. Will they have to eat their words? Not like they don’t have the funds to handle this, being one of the largest companies on the planet, and besides, here’s another angle: if they handle all of the legal challenges for these customers, they get that much more data to train GPT on, so that their guardrails will be better and the results of people’s prompts will be less likely to trigger litigation in the future. Oh, another caveat: those users have to have been using the MS-designed guardrails in order to qualify for this indemnification. If you circumvented those things, you are screwed, so no DANGPT shenanigans. If you don’t know, there have been groups who have created various work-arounds to the guardrails for ChatGPT, and Microsoft has added its own filters to the situation, which can apparently be turned off, otherwise this issue would be moot, as I see it.

https://www.pcmag.com/news/microsoft-vows-to-shield-users-of-copilot-ai-from-copyright-lawsuits 

 

WE 4 – Google Sets Tone for Political Ads

Google has decided that any political ads using AI generated content must acknowledge that it was AI generated. This seems reasonable. They are about to roll out guidelines for content which will require prominently placed notices to the effect of “this image does not depict real events” or “this video content was synthetically generated” in or near the posted content. How many times, already, have we been taken in by something that appears real, but is not? Wait, every day on the news… Uh oh. But in terms of online, though, sometimes memes are difficult to tell from reality. For instance, how many people thought that the image released last week, alleging to be Trump’s mugshot was real? I did for a bit. That was essentially a clever meme, since mugshots always have height markers and such in the background. Trump has made a killing off of those images. I do not say this to disparage the cleverness of that move, or to insinuate that Trump should or should not have been arrested. That issue, I leave for another time. His team is absolute fire, in terms of marketing. They turn all of these things that would destroy any other candidate into cannon fodder for the campaign. But I digress. Deepfakes are a problem for people who lack discernment, this has been proven time and time again. The technology exists to make anybody say just about anything, fairly easily. Forcing campaigns to acknowledge when they are using generative AI to create out-of-character or unreal types of scenarios for their candidate or the opposition is a good thing, in my book, since these tools, in the hands of ethically challenged political hacks could really create ugly situations. Google has also banned demonstrably false statements in campaign ads. Who decides what is true, though? Google? Or actual, real facts?

https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-66739858

 

WE 5 – Low-end Android TV Devices Are Vulnerable to Hacking

You may or may not remember the Mirai firmware bug which could allow an attacker to hijack your device to form a botnet and carry our Distributed Denial of Service attacks (DDoS) against servers of their choice. What is a DDoS attack? It is a method by which bad actors often do shut down the servers for a targeted website by creating a network of “bots” which spam nonsense packets at the server in question until it gets overwhelmed and has to shut down. There’s a new descendant of that exploit called Android.Pandora.2, which is making the rounds as a malicious firmware update. What is the purpose of an attack like this? The point is to cripple a website and perhaps hold its function for ransom. How can you avoid this if you have one of these older Android TV-equipped devices? Make sure that you regularly update your OS and firmware, and that you only install apps from trusted sources, not just random places.

https://www.techradar.com/pro/security/mirai-botnet-infects-android-tv-boxes-to-run-ddos-attacks 

 

WE 6 –  We Finally Have a Full Slate of FCC Commissioners

Whether this is a good thing or not remains to be seen. There is a real possibility that this new commissioner will renew the pursuit of Net Neutrality. That would be disastrous. Net Neutrality opens the door to greater censorship, not greater freedom. The FCC has only had 4 commissioners, 2 from each wing of the corrupt bird that is congress, for the duration of Depends’ administration to date. That has changed now. Leftists are cheering because their team now has a majority in this key commission which sets so much policy in this critical space. I am so tired of politics, y’all. It’s a dirty game which only seems to get dirtier the deeper you look into it. Special interests need to be given the boot so that people who are genuinely interested in serving We the People can rise up and change things. PAC’s need to be dismantled and banned. Big money cannot be allowed to corrupt the process any longer. Whether you want to call it Deep State, the military-industrial complex, or the cabal, or whatever other moniker you want to assign, it needs to be denied access to the halls of power. The revolving door between big business and big government needs to be shut down permanently. Sorry for the excursus here, but you probably agree with my sentiments if you’re bothering to read this blog anyway, so there you go. Let me know in the comments if you have any other related thoughts or prognostications.

https://www.pcmag.com/news/senate-confirms-new-fcc-commissioner-ending-2-plus-years-of-deadlock 

 

WE 7 – No More iPhones for CCP Officials

Lol. Now the CCP strikes back for the US’s bans on TikTok and Huawei, among others. They are turning our logic against us, and doing a tit-for-tat move. Well, iPhones are made by a well-known US company (albeit one with huge ties with the CCP, since most manufacturing seems to occur at Chinese little more than slave factories), therefore, since Apple is based in the US, they must have back doors into the devices in question which will feed data to the US intel community, after all. Apparently, this is just an official statement of an unwritten rule which has been in place since before CONvid was released. This cracks me up, honestly. This could also be a proactive clap back to US allies banning hardware from Chinese-based companies, as well as the pending giant turd called the RESTRICT act. Remember that steaming pile from a while back?

The RESTRICT Act has been touted by leaders on both sides of the aisle as a good thing, which always makes me nervous, I don’t know about y’all, but when “leaders” on both sides of the aisle praise a piece of legislation, it usually means that We the People are about to get stiffed and the government is about to get a raft of new powers to use against We the People. Let me remind you about this bill: its full name is Restricting the Emergence of Security Threats that Risk Information and Communications Technology Act. If that doesn’t send a chill up and down your spine, then perhaps a review of a few of the points it covers should. This bill would essentially ban VPNs in the US, because if one uses a VPN with an endpoint outside the US, one could access the products and services which the bill exists to block access to, due to their being created and managed by companies based in the countries which this bill is concerned with. The list of countries is populated with the usual suspects: China, Russia, North Korea, Cuba, Iran, and Venezuela. Companies which appear to be in the crosshairs, but remain unnamed, include Kaspersky (who makes anti-virus software), ByteDance (parent company of TikTok), and Huawei. It could also ban, or greatly complicate the growth of cryptocurrency. That is chilling. I used Kaspersky back in the day (before I made the move to Linux, full time, where AV solutions are less necessary on an individual computer basis, vs in a Windows environment). This bill is a massive overreach and further erodes our right to privacy as American citizens, which should be enshrined in the constitution. Thane again, the government of We the People, by We the People hasn’t lived to those standards for a very long time. If they were actually attending to the letter of the constitution, rather than dancing on its ashes every day, they wouldn’t try half of the harebrained nonsense that they have inflicted on the sleeping populace in the last 110 years, since the birth of the Fed.

https://www.techradar.com/pro/security/china-bans-iphones-for-government-officials 

WE 8 – UK Government Claims That It Hasn’t Backed Down

Remember a while back when I talked about the nonsense bill that the UK was working on, under the guise of “protecting the children”? There were a few encrypted messaging apps which objected strongly to the verbiage in that legislative effort, which included Signal, Whatsapp, and iMessage. The reality is that if encryption is the raison’d’etre for an application, and that is undermined by a government’s need to snoop, then there is no longer a good reason for that app to serve users in that country, for that matter, if e2e (end to end) encryption is broken at the behest of one country, then it may as well not exist elsewhere, either. This not only effects messaging apps, though that is the prime focus by the UK, here, but utilities like VPNs, that without the facility of e2e encryption would cease to serve any real purpose, either. These legislators, similar to the ones behind the RESTRICT Act, here in the US, are absolutely clueless about the technology. They just see a barrier to their control of our thinking and speaking and want it gone. The concept that encrypted messages could be meaningfully scanned without breaking the encryption is laughable at best. This is like dropping a nuke where a laser-guided precision strike would suffice. My understanding of the tech involved is that encryption = scrambling of message contents in such a way that no one without the key could read or make sense of it. By its nature, if someone other than the party you are communicating with has that key, then you are no longer private nor secure, and you may as well be emailing or sending an sms text message. In privacy terms, those are two of the least private ways to communicate, and you may as well be publicly broadcasting your data via FM radio. Sounds like the UK is about to lose access to Whatsapp (big deal, not really private or secure, hello, it is owned by Meta), iMessage (private, except from Apple, if I’m not mistaken), or Signal Messenger (the most private of the three). This is just a dumb move. I hope that the UK government wakes from its power trip in time to not pass this turd into law.

https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-66716502 

 

 

Weekend Edition 50

Weekend Edition 50: Trojan Apps, Teams Now Separate in EU, NVIDIA News, AI, and Tesla Nonsense

Weekend Edition 50: Trojan Apps, Teams Now Separate in EU, NVIDIA News, AI, and Tesla Nonsense

 

Be Careful, Little Droids, What You Install

Remember that Fine? Microsoft Doesn’t Want to Fight it Anymore

Nvidia AI Chip Restrictions Expand

Nvidia Closes Deal with Google

OpenAI Violates GDPR? You Don’t Say…

Protect Some of Your Data on Meta… Or Just Delete Your Account

‘Enterprise-Grade’ ChatGPT, Right….

NHTSA Raising Cain over Elon Mode Autopilot Mode

 

 

WE 1 – Chinese Trojan Apps Detected in Play Store

ESET, one of the premier antivirus providers, recognized two fresh CCP malware-embedded communications apps in the Play Store last month. They have been taken down, now, but they were also uploaded to the Samsung Galaxy Store. They were Signal Plus Messenger and Flygram. The first is a modification of the popular encrypted messaging app, Signal. This one can “collect similar sensitive data, such as the phone’s contact list, while also spying on a victim’s communications. “It can extract the Signal PIN number that protects the Signal account,” Stefanko wrote. In addition, the malicious code can allow the hacker to exploit the “link device” function to view their messages on the Trojanized Signal app.” What’s that mean? If you installed this modified app, your data would be anything but secure or private, in fact, it would be funneled to some server or servers in China. The malicious code injected into these apps is familiar to industry professionals, and is called BadBazaar. Here’s how you can avoid these sorts of apps, though, even if they make it through the screens and onto trusted stores: 1) make sure that the name of the app actually matches the official name, without modifications or tweaks; 2) Check the reviews for the app before you install it on your phone or computer; and 3) Make sure that you are properly sourcing your apps, direct from the developers, if possible (you can easily download and install Telegram from telegram.org and signal from signal.org if you’d like to do that, I actually suggest you do that, rather than depending on Google or Samsung, as those apps have extra censorship anyway).

https://www.pcmag.com/news/chinese-hackers-uploaded-trojanized-signal-app-to-google-play-store

 

WE 2 – Remember How Microsoft was About to Get Fined in the EU?

Well, they decided to split Teams off from MS365 in the EU to avoid the cost of litigation and fines. I’m somewhat shocked, to be honest. Then again, many municipalities and governments in the EU have gotten away from Microsoft products already, so MS is on its back foot in the EU. They do not want to make themselves any more odious in the Euro Zone than they already are. As of October, business, education, and private users will be able to select a cheaper Teams-less subscription option (saving $26/ year per user), or to buy Teams on its own for $65/ user per year. I made hay on the story about the potential fines to be assessed about a month ago, but MS kind of took the wind out of my sails here, by preemptively moving to split up its bundles in the Eurozone. Darn it all. Darn it all to heck. Will they voluntarily do this elsewhere? Here, perhaps? What would that do to businesses which depend on Teams and its integrations with the rest of O365? Many businesses depend on this collaboration suite, in all its facets, so if they did, it might hurt those small businesses. On the other hand, there is another aspect to this: MS is also set to provide easier API integration access to Slack and Zoom with O365 (calendars, email, etc).
 

https://www.pcmag.com/news/microsoft-to-sell-teams-separately-in-eu

 

WE 3 – Nvidia to Face Stricter Limits on AI GPU Sales

You know how the US has put restrictions on which and how many GPUs Nvidia could sell to China recently? Well, Depends’ handlers are concerned about Chinese diplomats and corporate getting their hands on this technology in the Middle East and shipping it back home. Thus, they are poised to apply similar limits in Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Jordan, and others. This could really hurt the chip designer. They could topple from their lofty perch as a $1 trillion dollar market cap company. Yes, AI has shot them to the moon that much. Their shifted focus could also trickle down in the form of GPU shortages to the consumer sector because all of their emphasis is on handling the demand for these insane number crunchers for AI development. Even with a company as massive as Nvidia, you have to remember that they only have so much time and resources that they can purchase in the form of “fab” time at TSMC. Remember, TSMC also makes chips for AMD and Intel, and must make time for that as well.

https://www.pcmag.com/news/nvidia-faces-more-restrictions-on-ai-chip-sales-this-time-in-the-middle

 

WE 4 – Speaking of Nvidia and AI, Nvidia Has Just Inked a Major Deal with Google

Just what we needed, right? Nvidia partnering with yet another of the abusive tech giants, arguably one of the worst. Then again, they already have deals with Microsoft and Amazon to have severs based on the H100 GPUs running to power their various AI models and tools. This news caused a 4.2% spike in the stock value for Nvidia. It closed at $493.55 on Thursday August 31, 2023, which is its highest close ever. That is huge for the chip maker, as their stock has historically tended to be closer to the $100-200 per share range, and in the last year, they have seen a >100% stock price value boom. This has sent them over into the trillion+ dollar market cap club, with the likes of companies like Apple, Google, and Microsoft. That is nuts. Understandable with Microsoft driving the AI boom, not to mention Windows and Office/ MS 365 sales, along with hardware and Azure and their big cash cow, OpenAI. There is a part of me that wants to speak ill of their success, but aside from when they pop up in the news for doing something stupid, these titans just keep on trucking, almost no matter what happens.

As an aside: because of their horrible business practices (here’s looking at you, Microsoft, Apple, and Google), I cannot be entirely happy with their success, as they hock typically sub-par products which spy on and treat their users like data mines rather than people who have rights to privacy and the like. Microsoft products are terrible, both on a functional level and in terms of privacy and security, and they spy on you like there is no tomorrow. Their telemetry is so embedded that it is almost impossible to root it out without impairing the already limited functionality of their OS and other software as a service options that my suggestion is to ditch it altogether and learn Linux so you can be free again.

As far as Google, we all know that they are a spy company by now. They exist to scrape data from your search queries, gmail messages, youtube histories, android usage history, and Maps data, among their other “free” products. There are alternatives for their services which do not entail bowing the knee to the monster Gates bred. Ones which will not force ads down your throat or scrape your usage data.

And Apple… don’t get me wrong, the Apple silicon hardware is a thing to behold and deserves the spotlight, but I do not like how they lock their users into a walled garden. Notice I called them users, not device owners. Apple does not treat people who buy their hardware as though they had bought it, but as though they were simply leasing these devices.

But I digress… Good job, Nvidia, for being astute enough in your planning to see this AI thing coming far enough ahead to capitalize on it the way that you have in the last year. That is not to say that Nvidia is a perfect company, either… They have stiffed their most loyal customers so many times, extorting them for marginal gains in their rigs, down to spiking the prices for those crucial parts to the moon. I’m still not convinced that RTX is that important, but because of the mindshare that Nvidia enjoys among PC enthusiasts, they have been able to steer the market in a very Apple-like way and set the tone for the other GPU makers (AMD, and lately, Intel).

https://www.cnbc.com/2023/08/29/nvidias-stock-closes-at-record-after-google-ai-partnership.html

 

WE 5 – ChatGPT Doesn’t Respect the GDPR? You Don’t Say…

A Polish researcher has filed a 17-page complaint with the local privacy watchdog relative to his experience with using ChatGPT to write a biography of himself and found mistakes in the results. Not sure how that made him question the privacy here, but he did dive into the terms of service and whatnot. When he did that, he found what appeared to be GDPR violations in regard to vagaries around how they handle personal data. Gee whiz, I wonder why they would have to be vague about privacy, given Microsoft’s involvement and attitude toward AI as a whole. Remember the last couple of weeks when we have talked about the “wild west of AI”, the responsibility for which is squarely at the feet of Microsoft, who bought OpenAI, the makers of ChatGPT. They took a, “do it now” approach to AI development, and discarded most of the safeguards which had been in place by the developers at OpenAI, among others. This has radically, and I would say, negatively, impacted AI development as a whole, as they chose to throw safety, functionality, and privacy concerns, burn them, and piss on the ashes. This infected the rest of the companies who had already invested r&d time and money into AI, because now they had to play catch-up with Microsoft’s new data mining toy, ChatGPT.

I think that that is the main draw for these mega corporations to blindly rush into generative AI models and tools. While this has spurred much rapid development in the space, which is good on some levels, it has also made this data grab that much more transparent. After all, if they can train their models and algorithms well enough, they can accurately predict our decisions and preferences and feed us ads and information to keep us in those patterns. This is about control. If knowledge is power, and data equals knowledge, and control comes through power, which is data in this equation, then data plus egomania equals control over the masses. That control leads to panics which we have seen in the last few years, from masking, vaxing, and social distancing, to lockdowns and runs on toilet paper and other commodity items. What is the solution? Refusing to participate. Do not use these generative AI tools any more than you already have, opt out of Microsoft, Apple, and Google products wherever you possibly can, and learn to live free.

https://www.techradar.com/computing/openai-accused-of-string-of-data-protection-breaches-in-gdpr-complaint

 

WE 6 – How to Protect Your Data from Llama2 on Meta

Now you can opt out of your data being used to train this open source monstrosity. It allows you to delete or exclude some of your personal data from being used to train LLAMA 2. This only pertains to info not scraped from Meta properties (Facebook posts, comments, pictures, etc, as well as posts on Instagram or the DOA Threads platform). They do claim that they have yet to roll out any AI products or services on their platforms, but how can we take them seriously, anyway? This is all about data they scrape from other sources for their LLM. Do you believe that this opt-out or delete option is something that will actually be respected, at least here in the US, where our privacy laws and regulations aren’t hardly up to the task? I think that people in the EU have a good chance, or at least a better chance, of being respected by Meta in this, because they know that if they fail to do so, they will have hell to pay from the boys and girls in Brussels. My best advice is to ditch these platforms if you are able to in the least. If not, then you’ll need to dig around in the privacy policy a bit to find the “Generative AI Data Subject Rights” form there, and click “Learn More and Submit Requests Here” link, then pick option two to delete any gathered third-party data from Llama 2. After you click submit, you will be required to pass a security check, which may or may not work. At least you will have done your best to limit their data gathering, whether it winds up meaning anything or not.

https://www.cnbc.com/2023/08/30/how-to-stop-meta-from-using-personal-data-to-train-generative-ai-.html

 

WE 7 – “Secure” and “Private” ChatGPT? Press “X” to Doubt

Well, now the world has “enterprise-grade” ChatGPT, with access to GPT-4 and all. So, why should big business want this? It is allegedly personalized, more or less a one-off of the GPT-4 LLM (large language model) which can privately be trained by each enterprise licensee. They say that it is secured with 256-bit AES encryption when the data is at rest, and TLS 1.2+ while in transit. That sounds all well and good, but how can I trust that my “version” of ChatGPT won’t make the whole thing more better by using my company’s inputs to train it? This reminds me of Bedrock, the AWS equivalent. Perhaps this is my anti-Microsoft bias showing through again, but I don’t trust anything that they have their grubby paws involved with. I dare you to try to convince me that they are actually trustworthy. Is this data truly end-to-end encrypted? Does OpenAI have access to each customer’s version? How much access do they have? 32k tokens in a company of 30-50k people seems rather constrained to me. That is what they are targeting, the whales of the world, those Fortune 500+ type of companies who have massive budgets to throw at automation and AI, to “stay at the bleeding edge” in terms of competition. It removes the 50 messages / 3 hours limit that regular Plus users have to contend with. I’m sure that Connor will have more to say about this than I do at the moment, but this, while I’m sure that it is true that these “whale” corporations do mostly use it to some extent, feels monumentally stupid to me right now. Given, most companies in that rarefied air already use O365 and the rest of the MS software stack, but why give them any more data than they already have? Again, I recognize my bias against Microsoft, here, but come on. You guys must see that this is at least problematic. 

https://www.computerworld.com/article/3705551/openai-launches-enterprise-grade-chatgpt.html

 

 

WE 8 – “Elon Mode” Autopilot Is a Thing, Apparently…

So usually when a Tesla occupant engages “Full Self-Driving” Mode, there is a nag which is in place to remind you to put your hands back on the wheel and pay attention to the road. This “nag” starts as a blinking symbol on the giant touchscreen in the dash, if you ignore it, the car will start to beep at you until you put your hands back on the wheel. “Elon Mode”, also known as, “Look ma, no hands” mode (not really), turns the nag off entirely. The NHTSA is not happy with this, as self-driving tech has not been proven safe as yet, and in communities where autonomous taxis have become a thing, they are being removed because they have had more wrecks than human drivers do. Given, those are not Tesla systems, but the ability, no matter how “secret”, to turn off safety features like that is a rather disconcerting back door, if you ask me. Musk used it in his livestreamed demo on X, almost as if to rub the government’s nose in it. I could get into how little I trust Elon right now, but that is besides the point, isn’t it? My cynical side sees all of this “self-driving” and “AI” stuff as a tool to control us more fully, but then, that is the point of govern-ment, isn’t it? To control the minds of the populace… Maybe I need to get my fin foil hat back out, but even as a tech guy, I am uncomfortable with these things. I want to own, control, and be able to manage all of my stuff as much as possible, particularly when it comes to tech. Call me paranoid, but I think that you will see that I’m right if we let this timeline spool out too much further in the direction it is headed right now. We need to jump tracks, y’all. This ends here, and now. If there were a way to do these things effectively without reference to something centralized and out of our control, then I’d be more amenable to it by far. The problem is that anything that is electronic and has open network ports anywhere can be hacked. Anything electronic can be shut down via EMP, so low-tech is the best way to go if you want to avoid that sort of nonsense. Inconvenient? Absolutely. Painful? At times. Am I something of a hypocrite in talking about this as I type on my MS Surface (running Linux since I got it) and post through my T-Mobile home internet connection? Probably. Thus is life, and at least I fully admit to hypocrisy where it exists.

https://www.cnbc.com/2023/08/30/tesla-ordered-by-nhtsa-to-provide-data-on-elon-mode-for-autopilot.html 

Weekend Edition 49

Weekend Edition 49: Malware, Autistic Hackers, AI & More

Weekend Edition 49: Malware, Big Tech, AI, and More

Smoke Loader Malware

Danish Cloud Companies Smashed by Ransomware Attack

Google Adding MFA to Sensitive Settings

Windows 11 Update Causes Instability (yawn)

Good Guy Apple?

GPT-4 Could Moderate Your Content on Social Media…

SBF on “Bread & Water”

Lapsus$ Cybergang Ringleader in Prison Again

 

WE 1: Say Hello to Whiffy Recon, the Latest Smoke Loader Payload

Before I get into the new payload, which while creepy enough, is not a common type of attack vector, let’s cover what Smoke Loader is. It is a vehicle which can be used to install other malicious code onto targeted machines. Whiffy Recon, a new payload for the venerable Smoke Loader program, can tap into Google’s geolocation API to triangulate a machine’s approximate location via wifi triangulation. It can poll WiFi networks in range every 60 seconds on Windows machines to give attackers that info. On its own, this is not that big of a deal, but in conjunction with other attack vectors, it could be quite something in terms of monetization for bad actors. It has been spotted in the wild, in the US, UK, Germany, and France. It often comes through phishing attacks, and the payload shows up as wlan.lnk in your user’s startup folder. It is safe to delete if you come across it there.

https://www.pcmag.com/news/new-malware-component-can-use-wi-fi-triangulation-to-determine-pcs-location

 

WE 2: Ransomware Attack Levels Two Danish Cloud Providers

CloudNordic and Azero Cloud got obliterated by a ransomware attack on both of their datacenters. It appears that one system which was recently (sometime last week) physically transferred from one facility to the other had a dormant piece of malware, and when they reconnected the system, the piece of malware activated and set to work in both datacenters, encrypting all of the data on all of those servers and in their infrastructure as well. Ouch. They expect that they won’t have any clients left after this, and understandably so. They should have had better security practices in place to prevent such a horrible breach. It almost makes me wonder if it was something of an inside job, because how would the attackers have breached the server(s) they did initially without some help? Perhaps I’m missing something here, but this doesn’t sit right with me, you guys. What do you think?

https://www.pcmag.com/news/ransomware-wipes-out-data-access-for-majority-of-cloud-providers-customers 

 

WE 3: Google Beefing Up Security Around Email Settings

Gmail looks to be getting more MFA rolled out, now the focus is potentially forcing users to verify themselves when tweaking filtering, forwarding, and IMAP access. This feels invasive, but then Google owns your emails in gmail anyway, so yeah… It makes sense to me that they would want to protect their data from others’ eyes. Forwarding could leave your inbox empty moving forward, if an attacker gets overzealous.  Filtering could make it less visible to you in your own account, by setting up folders, and or archiving which obscures your access to your emails… IMAP allows third party apps to retrieve your emails, so an attacker, if this deep in your business, could also set that up and snoop that way, similarly to forwarding. I guess this is a “Good on you, Google” kind of situation. At the same time, my cynic alarms are blaring and my spidey sense is more than tingling. I want to bash Google whenever possible, after all, that is part of my schtick, but I’m torn here. These MFA prompts can be quite irritating, but could help keep you safe from a nosy neighbor, or from a legitimately bad actor snooping on your gmail account.

https://www.pcmag.com/news/google-to-protect-sensitive-gmail-settings-with-a-multi-factor-challenge 

 

WE 4: MS Bones Windows 11 Update, Causes BSODs

To be clear this isn’t ENTIRELY Microsoft’s fault… MSI seems to have released a firmware update bungling Intel 14th-gen support. If you guys haven’t been keeping track, Microsoft recently weeded out a bunch of old, entry-level server chips from the “supported processors” list in Windows 11. The error with these motherboards pops up as a BSOD claiming that your processor is no longer supported in Windows. At this point, the solution is to rollback your updates to before you installed that one for Windows, and Microsoft has pulled those updates from circulation pending further investigation. That was surprisingly quick, since the update in question was just rolled out on August 22. I will update with more info as it is available, for those of you with MSI based 12th or 13th generation Intel systems.

Well, well, well… Good job, Microsoft. You managed to roll out an update that directly caused BSODs for some of your users, given, only a small segment of the user base, but then you quickly did the right thing. Perhaps due to the negative press they’ve been getting lately in the face of terrible security policies which have finally affected the wrong people? What do you guys think? Are they feeling as though they are on the hot seat, here?

https://www.pcmag.com/news/microsoft-released-a-windows-11-update-thats-causing-pcs-to-bsod 

 

WE 5: Good Guy Apple?

Wait a minute… Did I just write that? Yes I did. Apple is finally starting to cave to the right-to-repair movement after having loudly opposed it in every possible way for 10 years. They fought hard against this in California and in other places, but now, as other states have passed similar consumer rights legislation, California is poised to do the same, and even the trillion dollar behemoth with the damaged fruit on its products is realizing that it is no longer worth fighting it. Wow. This is a HUGE feather in the caps of people like Louis Rossmann and so many others who have advocated and lobbied for these sorts of bills around the country and the world. Right to repair is fundamental, as I see it, and is why I so strongly encourage everyone to learn Linux and move away from the Big Tech options. I believe that everyone should be able to do basic repair on their computers and phones without needing someone like Rossmann or even myself to help them. But I digress, let’s take a look at this bill, shall we?  (if you’s like to do so, here is a link to the Bill itself: https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billTextClient.xhtml?bill_id=202320240SB244 and to analysis of it: https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billAnalysisClient.xhtml?bill_id=202320240SB244) It sounds like a solid step in the right direction to me, but I’m no lawyer. Is it perfect? No. Too many fingers are in the pie, here, including Apple’s. Some basics on it run like so: if your device is worth between $50 and $99.99, those tools, parts, and documents would need to be available for three years. If it is worth $99.99 or more, then tools, parts, and docs would need to be available for seven years. Aside from that, Apple is requiring some slightly shady things be included:

The bill does not require security features to be disabled on devices.

The issue I have with this bit is that sometimes, such as in situations involving something like TPM, where there are moments when the security measures actually prevent repair attempts for devices in question. 

The focus remains on manufacturers to supply the tools, parts, and documentation to enable repairs by authorized repair channels.

Ok, this works, but still keeps too much control in the hands of these mega corporations. I understand that they are concerned about things like corporate espionage and the like, but if an outlet like iFixit is able to produce parts which allow more people to service their phones more readily because the price isn’t so high, it seems like this is an all around win for consumers.

Repair providers must disclose if they are using non-genuine or used parts.

Makes perfect sense. I want to know what kind of parts are being put into my device, not just the bottom line. I want to have options, rather than being forced into something.

Prospective application that allows manufacturers to build new products that comply with the proposal.

I get why they want this. I do, however, this strikes me as too much control, after all, we consumers BOUGHT these devices, didn’t we? I also am uncomfortable with empowering the government to police much more than they already do, otherwise I would say that like the EU, we should FORCE compliance. There is a part of me that wants to say that anyway, though, just out of spite toward Apple et al. What do you guys think? Am I off base, here, or right on target?

https://www.pcmag.com/news/apple-pledges-support-for-californias-right-to-repair-act 

 

 

WE 6: They’re Finally Telling Us About This…

Tell me we haven’t had some sort of short-bus quality AI moderating leftist social media for a while now. I’m waiting… Convince me. Well, now we are supposed to look, and gasp, and wonder, and fear this new Frankenstein’s monster we have created. GPT4 will be put to work parsing and enforcing content moderation policies very soon. Who knows, maybe this will actually be a reasonable usecase for this generative AI. I doubt it. Too much bias and too much snowflakitis, as my wife would say.

First, the moderation policies are draconian in many places. Don’t get me wrong, I understand the dynamics of these being ostensibly private enterprises, and the owners/operators have the right to refuse service to anyone (thank you, Apu) , but then they shouldn’t bill themselves as “public squares” or say ANYTHING about freedom of speech in their literature, marketing, or policies, other than qualifying what they mean by freedom of speech. If they make it painfully clear what they consider “ok” speech, then adhere to their standards, no matter who is availing themselves of the provided platform, then fine. They can do whatever they want. They have not done that in the least. Their rules and policies are almost always so full of legalese that no average human being could read and comprehend them fully without something like a Black’s Law Dictionary at hand… Not only that, but these rules seem to change with the wind, so they don’t dare to spell it out fully at any given time, for the public to see. This, as I have said in the past, is unfair and capricious of them. I don’t know that I would want them to become like a utility, with that much more government oversight and embeddedness. The truth is that I do not have a solid solution for the problem, but will shout from the rooftops until the world hears and starts to work it out.

Second, I do not trust OpenAI and their overlords at Microsoft and Blackrock & Vanguard group (remember that together, those firms/ funds own about 1/4 of Microsoft, and Microsoft bought OpenAI last year, not long before ChatGPT was unleashed on the world). I think that their biases are hard to the Left, which is not what we need right now. I do not think that it is possible for a human to exist without biases, therefore anything we create will wind up inherently biased in some way, shape, or form. Chasing the holy grail of “neutrality” or “objectivity” is laudable, but is unobtainable, just as perfection is, this side of heaven. That said, do you think that it is reasonable to expect either of those things?

For these reasons, I do not see a bright future for AI moderation of internet content. It is a nice, fluffy thought for about 10 seconds, until we realize how ugly we have a tendency to be as humans, and how that has to affect any LLM we may create to power something like GPT-4. What do you guys think?

https://www.computerworld.com/article/3704618/openai-to-use-gpt-4-llm-for-content-moderation-warns-against-bias.html 

 

WE 7: SBF on “Bread & Water” in Jail

The former “king of crypto” has found himself in prison once again after violating the terms of his bail agreement by tampering with witnesses, among other things. His lawyer is claiming that lack of adequate food is limiting his ability to prepare for his October court date. They are claiming that the bureau of prisons is not providing appropriate vegan food for him, but not only that, they are not staying on top of his Adderall and Emsam to treat his ADHD and depression, respectively. I shouldn’t laugh at this, but it is hard not to. All he would have had to do was keep his nose clean until the trials, but he couldn’t manage that, so now he’s in jail again, and whining about conditions. Poor baby. If you can’t handle doing the time, you shouldn’t have done the crime(s) you’ve been accused of. True, our justice system is allegedly based on the notion of, “Innocent until proven guilty”, but only if you are an elite or an ally or brownnoser of the elite.  However, if you stand up to them, you seem to get run out on a rail. See: Donald J. Trump. I digress, though, health, whether physical or mental, is crucial to maintain, and is a human right for inmates. We cannot go back to how it was back in the old days, when prisoners got next to nothing, starved, and did not get adequate care. I could launch into a big tirade on this issue, but I won’t.

https://www.bbc.com/news/business-66589797 

WE 8: Lapsus$ Cyber Gang *Mostly* Behind Bars

These autistic kids went on a few hacking sprees and were really good. Makes sense that autists would be excellent at pattern recognition, as that is most of what is necessary to be a good hacker or developer. These kids hacked some really huge companies, like Nvidia, Uber, and Rockstar Games. These were the ones who leaked all of that stuff on GTA 6 a couple of years ago. They even hit Microsoft itself. Their first attack was more or less a ransom attack on a couple of British telco providers, who did not give them the $4 million they requested, but the kids did make about $100k through stealing crypto from the crypto accounts they breached via stealing sim card data. They were arrested, but continued hacking away, hitting Nvidia in February of 2022, they spammed, phished, and managed to get access to the company’s data. The main kid even got doxxed and had to be moved into a motel to keep him and his family safe. Later, he broke his bail conditions by buying a Fire Stick, smart phone, keyboard, and mouse. Can’t seem to help himself at this point. During that time was when he/they (the gang) hit the rest of the bigger US based companies mentioned earlier. I’m sorry, as wrong as this is, it makes me laugh. These mega-corporations, with their billions, if not trillions of dollars in revenue can’t manage to defend themselves against some determined, autistic kids. That is sad. Pitiful, really. We need to do better. Digital hygiene and a little discernment go a long way to limiting attack surfaces, but as long as people assume that they are safe and wouldn’t be targeted in an attack, they won’t change their practices, and will continue being “low-hanging fruit”.

https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-66549159 

Weekend Edition 47: AI Is Stupid and More

Weekend Edition 47: AI Is Stupid & More

MS 365 Accounts Hacked… Again

Zoom: “Trust us, Bro.”

ChatGPT Sucks as a Knowledgebase

GPTBot to Scrape Your Website: Here’s How to Block It.

AI Steals Passwords? Knowledge Is Power

OSS Moq Temporarily Included Extra Tracking Tools in Its Codebase… Oops…

Hear About Trump’s Twitter Subpoena?

WE 1 – Massive Phishing Campaign Against C-Level Execs

Filed under the category of “Microsoft Sucks”, a bad actor has been attempting to take control of a plethora of C-level executives’ accounts at various large companies, again. It appears to have a Turkish origin and uses a known tool, called EvilProxy to send about 120,000 emails to similar accounts over the last few months. It costs about $400 per month, and is being used to steal MFA codes, login credentials, and other things through a labyrinthine series of redirects until they land on a very carefully crafted, specialized landing page for each organization they target. How do they know that it is related to Turkey? If a targeted person uses a VPN with a Turkish endpoint, they don’t actually get phished.

Ok, I guess this isn’t really MS’s issue, but I still want to take whatever chance I can to bash them. Not sure that they could legitimately make reasonable changes to make their platforms and services un-phishable. That kind of social engineering attack has been a “thing” since the early days of networking, back in the late 70’s, it was how Kevin Mitnick gained access to that DEC server system in 1979, as well as the Pac Bell voicemail system in the early 90s. We do, however, need to raise awareness and observational skills for people in positions of power. If we effectively train people to only trust those sorts of emails from their own IT personnel, then I think we would make a big step toward defeating these kinds of attacks in the future. Unfortunately, this is likely a nearly insurmountable problem at this point. For those of you who work in corporate America, always check random emails asking for credentials with your IT department before you just blindly offer up your sign-in to some bad actor. Practice better digital hygiene. This will save everybody involved many unnecessary headaches.

https://www.techradar.com/pro/microsoft-365-users-targeted-by-major-phishing-campaign 

WE 2 – Zoom: Private, or a Giant AI Nightmare?

Recently, Zoom did a rewrite on their terms of service and privacy policies. By recently, I mean that they were rolled out in March 2023. They were recently uncovered by a hawkeyed researcher. There was a justifiable uproar about these changes across the interwebz. They appeared to give Zoom blanket permission to use every call, every chat to train AIs and associated algorithms. After the fracas. The Chief Product Officer issued a blog as well as some quick edits to the documents in question. Sections 10.2 and 10.4 seem to give the platform carte blanche rights to grab any user interaction with the platform as a source of data for its AI models and algorithms. The company clarified their position with a rather tepid, “Trust us, bro. We would NEVER do that WITHOUT permission from our users. Your user data (voice, video, and chat inputs) is safe and private, unless you opt into this.” Right. I believe them. Thanks to Microsoft’s purchase of the Lion’s Share of OpenAI last year and forcing chatGPT out before the fledgling chat bot was ready to fly, we have this wide open, anything goes situation around so called AI. Truth is that there isn’t much that is intelligent about AI, right now. It’s kind of like T9 predictive texting on steroids, right now. Auto-correct run amok. We will talk about that in the next story, though.

https://www.pcmag.com/news/zoom-revises-terms-after-changes-spark-fears-of-ai-learning-from-video 

WE 3 – ChatGPT Sucks as a Knowledgebase

ChatGPT was recently set up with a series of 517 programming related questions and limited to looking within StackOverflow for answers, and 52% of the time, it came up with the wrong answer. Yikes. Next week, we’ll talk more about this, once my co-host has a chance to get home and digest all that he learned at Black Hat this week. All I’m saying here is that we can’t trust these tools for anything mission-critical. Connor will weigh in more heavily on this issue next week. As I said above, think of these tools as glorified T9 texting. Remember that predictive texting algorithm from the time before touchscreens and full keyboards on phones? Remember how messed up some of those predictions were, especially when you first got a new phone, back in the day? That is chatGPT, right now. Given, the more input we give it, the theoretically better it will get, but is it worth being a guinea pig for Big Tech? Personally, I say, “No.” What about you? Is a little bit of convenience (which is not really convenient) worth giving up digital sovereignty and your own brain power in order to use? These tools are meant to eventually create a WALL-E situation in us, where we never really use the ol’ gray matter between our ears because, well, why should we, if we have all this info at our fingertips through AI tools? Aside from that, there are massive privacy and security issues, which are not going away anytime soon. Seems like a crapshoot, and I’m not a gambling man. No, thanks, I’ll pass.

https://www.techradar.com/pro/chatgpt-is-a-bad-knowledge-base-confirms-new-study 

WE 4 – Speaking of AI and Security…

We have a new hole to be concerned with. An infected smartphone could funnel the sounds of your keystrokes to an AI tool, which can interpret them and discern, within a keystroke, what your passwords are. Uhhh, yikes. One can also use Zoom to the same end, though it is less accurate than a separate, but nearby device. The training involved was 25 keystrokes per key on a given keyboard, so on a 105 key, that is over 2500 keystrokes. These capture methods were 95 and 93% accurate, respectively, which means that an average, strong password would have a single wrong or missing character. In the words of Nigel Ng’s character, Uncle Roger, “Haiyahhh!!”

This article provides a few mitigation steps: 1. Use a noise filter to filter out the sound of your keyboard or 2. Vary your typing style to confuse the AI. These seem like stop gaps, not real solutions, to me. The noise filter is better than trying to remember to type like fremen walking across the desert… With no rhythm. I don’t know, you guys. I am not into fearporn. However, I really don’t like AI as it is. That is where I am at with the whole thing. Next week, we’ll have more concrete reasons to distrust it, and perhaps stop using it if you can. Remember the Sarah Silverman lawsuit I mentioned in the last couple of weeks? We are going to talk about the chatgpt web crawler bot and how to deny it access to your site and its content, next.

https://www.pcmag.com/news/ai-can-now-steal-your-passwords-by-listening-to-your-keystrokes 

WE 5 – Want to Deny ChatGPT Access to Your Website & Its Content?

Of course you do, if you value privacy and intellectual property. Here’s how you handle that: either open up your cpanel for your website (or ask your hosting provider to do the following) and go to the file manager, then edit the robots.txt file, which should be in your site’s root directory.

If doing this yourself, scroll to the file manager in cpanel, open it, then use the search function to find robots.txt.

Once you establish connection to it, open the file editor and add the following to the end of the file, then save it:

User-agent: GPTBot

Disallow: /

However, if you want to limit, but not entirely deny its access, paste in the following, and adjust to reflect your desired level of permission for the bot:

User-agent: GPTBot

Allow: /directory-1/

Disallow: /directory-2/

I’m all about providing solutions to problems posed by big tech, y’all. That is what my FYI (Free Your Internet) service is about, giving you solid options to help you get away from Google, MS, and Apple, in particular. You should check it out over at: https://techfreedom.pro/internet-freedom/ . You can also peruse the blogs on that page to check out some options for yourself before you bite the bullet. I want as many people and businesses to break free from the convenience-spying trap that is Big Tech, as possible. If you want to check out what I was referencing earlier, here are the articles I culled the info from:

https://www.pcmag.com/news/openais-gptbot-will-scrape-your-website-to-train-its-ai-unless-you-opt 

https://platform.openai.com/docs/gptbot 

WE 6 – MOQ, the Popular FOSS .net Mocking Library, Not-So-Private?

In one recent version, the lead developer, who also works on the proprietary software he incorporated into v 4.20.0, put SponsorLink into the codebase to collect hashes of user email addresses. This was uncovered by BleepingComputer earlier this month, and upon its discovery and publication, the offending code was removed (as of v 4.20.2). Lol, he started including extra, closed source tracking DLLs in v 4.20, was he high? It was double-obfuscated, but come on, man. You don’t drop proprietary blobs into FOSS projects, particularly not when you don’t notify your users that you are doing it and why you are doing it beforehand. What is a .net mocking library? It allows you to more easily test .net calls in your codebases and projects, rather than writing all of it out long-form. More or less, it helps developers to save time in creating their programs and apps which use .net objects (which are legion). Why is it a big deal that this FOSS project suddenly (until caught red-handed) started using a closed-source tracker in its codebase? Well, ideologically, FOSS/Libre and proprietary things are like oil and water. They don’t mix well. Functionally, you could do whatever you want, however, as I said above, if you do something like that, I strongly suggest that you choose to inform your userbase of such changes and why you want to incorporate them before you include them, if you want to keep your users around in the future. That was a huge fauxpas. Time will tell if the project starts to die from this, but it was a huge, but avoidable misstep, if you ask me.

https://www.techradar.com/pro/top-open-source-project-moq-slammed-for-secretly-collecting-user-data 

WE 7 – Trump’s Twitter Account Subpoenaed…

Jack Smith, special prosecutor, went on a fresh round of fishing excursions with this subpoena. This is surprisingly old news, in that the events actually took place about 6 months ago now, but had been under a gag order from the court. Smith requested these “data and records” from Mr. Trump’s Twitter account in regard to both of his investigations, about the documents stored at Mar-A-Lago, and relative to January 6. Twitter complied, but 3 days late, so were slapped with a $350,000 fine for contempt of court. Their team did not object to the request itself, but the secrecy of it. They argued that they should be able to notify users when their accounts are subject to warrants (which seems to be in line with the constitution, as I understand it, so right on, there, Twitter/X). The court rejected their arguments and enforced the gag order. I don’t care that Trump is a former president, here, this judicial overreach must be remedied, and soon. I can’t wrap my head around the banana republic ness of this whole series of events. The fact that they can do this to someone as high profile as Trump is should make any sane person sick to their stomach.

What have they already done to “little” people, the John & Jane Q. Public’s of Main St, USA? What will they push to do more of in the future, to keep us in line with their mind control efforts? (Remember, that is literally what govern-ment means, y’all, ment = mind, and to govern something is to control it)… Become un-governable. Reject their narratives, question everything, and encourage those around you to do the same. Choose to stop using tools which exist to spy on you. Twitter/ X, Meta (and its products), Microsoft products, Apple products, Google products and services. Reject it all. Go Open Source. Become more privacy-aware. Not paranoid, mind you, but privacy-aware. Regain your digital sovereignty. Tech Freedom can help you do just that. Mark37 and Altha Tech can help you as well. There are alternatives, sure, they are less convenient, but you also aren’t volunteering your data (privacy) to mega-corporations who are bent on running the world.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-66365643 

https://techfreedom.pro

https://Mark37.com 

https://althatech.com 

Weekend Edition 46

Weekend Edition 46 – LK99, MS Lazy, and More

FTC Slams Robo-dialing Scammers
FCC Rural Broadband In Trouble?
Tenable Slams MS for Unethical, Slow, and Lazy Handling of Security Concerns
X Tries to Shut Down Critics
Undersea Cables? What About Them?
Incandescent Bulb Ban
LK-99: Worth Getting Worked Up Over?

WE 1 – Remember Those Robo-Calls About Your Auto Warranty?
The tandem behind this scheme, Roy M. Cox and Aaron Michael Jones, orchestrated more than 5 billion calls to about 500 million phone numbers in the course of 3 months in 2021. That is about 643 calls per second, if it was exactly 90 days. Holy crap. I’m struggling to wrap my head around the sheer volume, here. Because this is not the first time they have been caught doing similar things, the FTC laid the smack down on them, to the tune of a $299,997,000 fine. I suppose with robocalling via VOIP, it is really only a matter of 1’s and 0’s and bandwidth. Even still, to have it “just work” for that long. I have to wonder what the investment was up front, in order to access the phone number database, and the servers to host the files for the robot system. They also masked their caller ID to encourage people to pick up. These clowns sound like they ran a pretty tight ship. Hats off. Shoot, I think my wife and I got something like a couple calls a day from these jokers. I wonder if we can get a piece of that fine action, once they pay it.
https://www.pcmag.com/news/pair-of-scammers-hit-with-fccs-biggest-robocalling-fine-300-million-dollars

WE 2 – ISPs Underbid Themselves To Get Contracts
The FCC’s Rural Digital Opportunity Fund looks to be in trouble after several of their ISP partners did not estimate their costs properly when they sought to drive their bids down to get the contracts for providing 100MBs broadband service to much of rural America. This would be HUGE, once completed. However, Biden-flation has hit all of us hard, and demand, on top of that, shot the construction and material costs for these new Fiber lines through the roof. They are complaining that they couldn’t possibly have foreseen that costs would skyrocket so high. This has led a significant group of them to send a letter as a coalition, to the FCC, who manages the RDOF. That is one thing that you can always count on with the government, an ever-growing proliferation of stupid acronyms. The FCC has stated that they will hold these ISPs to the bids they submitted and will not give them an easy way out, at least not automatically. These businesses need to sort things out better for themselves when they put forth their bids. My uncle ran a general contracting company for something like 30 years (it was done in by some bad deals, coupled with the 2008 crash), and I remember hearing about the bidding process from time to time. You had to be really on point in order to give a good, accurate bid so that there weren’t cut-rate shenanigans happening in order to actually make money for the company and their sub-contractors. I do not pity these ISPs who zealously under-bid themselves chasing these contracts.
https://www.pcmag.com/news/fccs-rural-broadband-fund-faces-trouble-isps-want-more-money

WE 3 – Cybersecurity Firm Tenable Slams Microsoft
Just a few days after Sen. Wyden’s letter last week, Amit Yoran, the CEO of cybersecurity firm, Tenable, released a blog excoriating the giant for its practices. One of his researchers discovered a critical vulnerability in the Azure cloud infrastructure which “could allow a hacker to access applications and sensitive data, including authentication secrets, from enterprise customers that use Azure.” Using this exploit, they were able to easily and quickly discover the authentication secrets to a bank which uses the Azure Cloud. They uncovered this and reported it back in March. Now, more than 90 days later, it has yet to be fully patched. We are looking at more than 4 months after it was discovered, and any client whose applications were launched before the partial patch are still vulnerable, including the bank which was used as a test case. MS, of course, claims that it has fully taken care of the problem for everybody, now. However, the patching process was incredibly slow, allegedly because they wanted to develop a “quality patch”. I’m sorry, the FOSS community would take care of something like this with a minimum of fuss, in probably half the time. Microsoft’s excuses are as poor as their ethics appear to be around this issue. Yes, I will make hay on this issue for as long as it exists. This is still more reason why everyone needs to get as far away from Microsoft products as quickly as they can. Linux is the best option, though unfortunately is still not a 100% thing for many, as certain software simply will not function on Linux, because developers are stubborn and publishers are unwilling to take a chance on the scrappy underdog of the desktop space, though most of them run their cloud services on Linux servers. That, at least, is the best excuse I can come up with, from outside the halls of these institutions. If you want to learn more about switching, take a look at my website: https://techfreedom.pro/freed-computer/
https://www.pcmag.com/news/cybersecurity-firm-blasts-microsoft-for-slow-incomplete-bug-patches

WE 4 – Undersea Cables: The Unsung Heroes of the Information Age
What are they? How do they work? Why can you watch a concert live from overseas with minimal lag? These are the backbone of the internet. There are over 500 undersea fiber optic cables which crisscross our oceans, each handles a different batch of throughput. The average one is about as thick as a garden hose, and can handle anywhere from 50-400 terabits per second of data per cable, and companies who are working to improve the underlying tech see a potential path forward to creating cables which could handle up to 5 petabits of data per second (10x more bandwidth than today’s best cables). This is based on multiplying the number of cores per cable, and moving toward hollow core cables, as the speed of light is up to 47% faster in air vs glass, which would reduce latency and increase the overall speed of transfers.
This article observes that these cables, while vulnerable to breakages and intentional attacks, can not only bring faster internet speeds, and lower prices, but a 3% to 4% boost in employment and a 5% to 7% boost to economic activity in areas where they are installed but hadn’t been present before. The most frequent causes for breakages are unintentional, via anchor dragging during storms, or fishing-related incidents. However, other natural disasters, such as major storms and earthquakes are also common causes for breakage in these fragile cables which enable so much of the modern world to be as it is. You might be thinking, “well what about Starlink and other satellite-based communications?” Those only handle perhaps 1% of the world’s traffic right now. It makes far more sense to further improve and perfect the undersea cable network we have than it does to throw too much more effort into satellite communications, which can be interfered with by weather, and have far greater latency than the cable-based options which currently exist.
About 2/3 of the traffic comes from and through the hyperscalers. These are companies like Google, Microsoft, Amazon, and Meta. Ones whom I have a tendency to hate on whenever possible. However, their investments in laying, maintaining, and developing the new forms of these undersea fiber optic cables is immense, as data is their business. A new transatlantic cable costs between $250-300 million to install. They operate something like 400 of the 552 extant or planned cables, spanning 870,000 miles. There is a slated $10 billion in cables planned to be laid in the next couple of years as well. As you can imagine, it is a big deal to have a cut cable, but with around 500 active at any given time, the load sharing is not that big of a deal. At any given time there are 10 cables in need of repair. These repairs involve fishing out a damaged end of a cable, splicing in a new length, then running it to the other damaged end and splicing it all together. This is costly, as you need a similar craft to those which do the installs to actually fix these cables. Those ships house multiple mega-spools of the cable, and depending on the thickness of a given cable, that could mean up to 600 miles of the cable per spool. The thicker cables, which are being developed now, house multiple fiber optic cores, and this cuts down on the length which will fit on one of these massive spools for obvious reasons. With conventional fiber optic cables, one of these ships can handle up to 1800 miles of cable per trip.
What makes these so expensive, other than the fact that you’re talking about several hundred miles of fine, optically perfect glass tubes at the core of these cables? Every 30-60 miles, a repeater, has to be included in the cable, so that the signal doesn’t get lost, as with any other kind of cable. The law of entropy says that every signal, whether photons or electrons, will lose cohesion if pushed too far at a shot. This loss of cohesion will cause loss of data, so is unacceptable. If you want more information, just read the article linked below.

https://www.cnet.com/home/internet/features/the-secret-life-of-the-500-cables-that-run-the-internet/

WE 5 – Elon and X Using Lawfare to Shut Down Critics
Mr. Free Speech Absolutist himself can’t take the heat. A small non profit which exists to combat online hate speech (whatever the hell that actually means, since so much seems to change almost daily in the definition of that term). Musk & company is suing the Center for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH) of “unlawful acts” to “improperly gain access” to its data. What unlawful acts do they allege? More or less committing libel against the tech company through multiple reports published which state that X (formerly Twitter) has seen an explosion in what is categorized as “hate speech” because according to the data it gathered, the platform has been ignoring up to 99% of complaints against Blue Check accounts. The platform alleges that CCDH illegally scraped data from it, and improperly had access to a Brandwatch (a tool which allows companies to keep tabs on the conversations around them, their products, and services) account. These are big deal issues, and perhaps Elon & Co are right to sue for damages, as many advertisers paused spending when these reports were released, hurting the profitability of the platform. On the other hand, this is a really bad look for him. We’ll see what happens here, will the billionaire Goliath be vindicated, or will the David in this story win out? Do we want the David to win here? Is Hate Speech a valid concern, or do we simply need to grow some thicker skin and disconnect from the programming that tells us that outrage = rightness? What do you guys think?
https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-66376988

WE 6 – No More Glowy-Glowy Hot Lightbulbs
This is DUMB. Incandescent bulbs just work. They may not last as long as some other more recent tech, but at least they aren’t toxic (usually). They are inefficient and can be dangerous, but they don’t flicker, are easily adjusted, and generally have a more pleasant color temperature than many other options. Now, retailers are no longer allowed to sell regular, old incandescent bulbs any more. The primary concern here is energy usage, and the authorities, in their infinite wisdom, and likely well-lined pockets, courtesy of companies who make LED light fixtures and others in that space. I can understand banning CFLs, those things are terrible. But incandescent bulbs are classic and cozy, even if they are inefficient and wear out more quickly than alternatives do, because they are so simple and literally have a burning filament in the middle of a glass enclosure. So your general purpose lamp bulbs have been banned (those you would put in most lighting fixtures), but “specialty bulbs, three-way bulbs, chandelier bulbs, refrigerator bulbs, plant grow lights and others” have not been. This all reeks of special interest money from the mega corps who manufacture LED fixtures and “bulbs”, as well as government overreach. Trump was right to pause this piece of crap back in 2019. Say I’m just wanting to live in the past, but LED tech is not all it’s cracked up to be. I’ve never seen an LED bulb that didn’t flicker, and that can cause eye strain and headaches to be exasperated. There has to be a better way to do this. Besides, many people already made the switch to LED for the most part, years ago, right? Many were brainwashed by the Eco-cult into valuing the environment more than their own health and pocketbooks. There have not been enough studies done on the effects of LED on health and well being.
https://www.cnet.com/home/kitchen-and-household/incandescent-lightbulb-ban-heres-what-you-need-to-know/

WE 7 – Heard About LK-99 Yet?
It is alleged to be a room-temperature superconductor. This is a holy grail for materials science. Something that scientists have been trying to discover and develop for 50 years. What’s the big deal? Right now, in order for something to offer next to no electrical resistance (thus the term “super” conductor) it has to be supercooled to near absolute zero, or -473º Kelvin. This is a VERY expensive proposition, if/when we figure out a material which can function similarly at ambient temperatures would save a whole lot of energy and effort to achieve things like faster, more stable computers, including quantum computers, as well as maglev trains, and the like. Now conductors have to be constantly super cooled with something like liquid helium in order to achieve this electron-pairing property which greatly improves efficiency for those materials. A South Korean team claims they have found just such a combination of materials, which they have dubbed “LK-99”. There is a problem, though, no one has been successful in replicating their results. We will see what happens with this substance and if it is found to be this holy grail, or perhaps it might lead to it. This would change the world in a big way, you guys. That is why X has been on fire with speculations about it since it was announced. The team has uploaded a pair of related papers to arXIV, which is one database used by scientists to get their work peer-reviewed before it is published elsewhere. What do you guys think about this? Epic? Lame? Huh?

https://www.cnet.com/tech/computing/lk-99-superconductor-maybe-a-breakthrough-maybe-not-so-much/

Romans Road 2 – Chapter 8:10-16

Romans Road 2: Romans 8:10-16

Romans Road 2

Papa,

Thank you that we can call you “Papa”. Thank you that you loved us enough to send Jesus to make a way for us to be with you, to be in full communion with you. Jesus, thank you that you showed us the way, and opened the way for us to be sons and daughters of God. Holy Spirit, help us to hear you more clearly guiding us and reminding us that we are indeed the beloved children of God. In Jesus’ name,

Amen

 

This week we covered about 7 verses in Romans 8. Sin kills, Christ brings life and restoration. Flesh is an ally of sin, and cannot submit to God. We must learn to live loved, and become mature children of God, moved about by the impulses of the Holy Spirit, fully aware and accepting of the truth that we have been adopted by Him.

Romans 8:10-16

Now Christ lives his life in you! And even though your body may be dead because of the effects of sin, his life-giving Spirit imparts life to you because you are fully accepted by God.  Yes, God raised Jesus to life! And since God’s Spirit of Resurrection lives in you, he will also raise your dying body to life by the same Spirit that breathes life into you! 

So then, beloved ones, the flesh has no claims on us at all, and we have no further obligation to live in obedience to it. For when you live controlled by the flesh, you are about to die. But if the life of the Spirit puts to death the corrupt ways of the flesh, we then taste his abundant life.

The mature children of God are those  who are moved by the impulses of the Holy Spirit. And you did not receive the “spirit of religious duty,”  leading you back into the fear of never being good enough.  But you have received the “Spirit of full acceptance,”  enfolding you into the family of God. And you will never feel orphaned, for as he rises up within us, our spirits join him in saying the words of tender affection, “Beloved Father!”  For the Holy Spirit makes God’s fatherhood real to us as he whispers into our innermost being, “You are God’s beloved child!”

 

First, we talked about Romans 8:10-11. We learned how when we are in Christ, we are no longer dead to Christ and alive in sin. Yet, now, we are alive in Christ, and are being brought to life in Him.Not only in terms of spiritual life, but even our physical bodies can be restored to life and healed from the effects of our previous life. This is through the presence of the Holy Spirit, who also makes us fully acceptable to and accepted by God. You are fully accepted by God. Let that sink in. You are fully accepted by God. This acceptance brings healing, even to your natural body. It can begin to undo the consequences of your old sin patterns and family baggage and wounds. Let it. 

In verses 12-13, we saw how because we are in Christ, that old nature which is purely focused on what feels good in the moment, no longer has to control us. You no longer have to follow its dictates, and it is a dictator. Abundant life is yours when you choose to go where the way of the Spirit leads you. When you develop a relationship with the person of the Holy Spirit, He will help, guide, and protect you, if you listen to Him. That is Wisdom, y’all. What is this “way of the Spirit”? The way of the Spirit means living with a focus on how we can bless God and others. It is living in keeping with Torah, which, empowered by the Holy Spirit, we can do.

In verses 14-16, we saw how when you are fully accepted by God, you are His beloved child, in Christ. If you want to progress in getting closer to our Father, then you must empty yourself of your drive and desires and allow the Holy Spirit to guide you fully. That is far easier said than done. Let’s get on the path, or take another step on the path toward maturity today. Let’s hear the Spirit confirm in us that we are indeed beloved children of God.

What did we learn this week? That we are the beloved children of God, fully accepted by the Father, because of the work of the Son, through the power of the Holy Spirit. We hopefully had that reality driven home afresh, that sin, guilt, and shame need have no sway over us now. We have healing and restoration from the inside out. Can you believe all that? That is the abundance of life that the cross and empty tomb promise us who live in keeping with Jesus, through the power of the Holy Spirit. You are a beloved child of God. Let that truth shape your life.

Podcast Intro for The Weekend Edition

Welcome to my podcast. This show has been a stream on Rumble for some time, but I’ve been encouraged to turn it into a podcast to see how that might go.

What is the Weekend Edition? It is a news commentary show with a decidedly conservative and sarcastic tone. I believe that government should be small, people should be free, and laws should be limited. The real world throws those ideals into disarray on a daily basis as people and companies to horrible things to one another and prove that they cannot handle the responsibility which comes with freedom. I look at the week’s tech news and some current events which are related to tech, break them down, go on rants about related topics, then pose questions to the audience. The stream usually contains about a half hour of classic computer games as well, during which time I talk about the game and rant more, as well as summarizing the week’s stories. Sometimes I cover sensitive topics, and other times I may use some spicy language in my commentary. Tune in and subscribe to the blog, rumble channel, and here on your favorite podcast platform.