[-] BrownianMotion@lemmy.world 64 points 1 week ago

There is another.

The person who cannot spell "opinion".

[-] BrownianMotion@lemmy.world 72 points 2 weeks ago

This is not really a story, is it.

I worked for an Australian company, that was bought by an American company. Instantly we were required to do business as per American law, such as embargo's. We lost many customers (businesses) that honestly had nothing to do with the actual reason for the embargos. For example Iran has an American embargo because of nuclear refinement, but we just wanted to sell "knives and forks" to them. Nope - they might use those forks in their refinement centrifuges... This is what happens (but also why embargos work).

Kaspersky is Russian owned, so the hacks were discovered by Russian [whitehat] hackers. I'll bet that Apple had no ability to do "business" with the company, even if it wanted to, since Russia is currently under embargo due to the Ukraine conflict.

Now if Kaspersky spent time undermining it's own failure of a government, and putting an end to its dictatorship, things would probably work out better for everyone in Russia.

1065
Linux Salesman (lemmy.world)
[-] BrownianMotion@lemmy.world 39 points 2 months ago

I read about this, and you will have the ability to turn the ad's off in settings.

They are optional. For now.

[-] BrownianMotion@lemmy.world 44 points 6 months ago

Well I was in the mining industry, in a service capacity. The company sold equipment to China mining companies to actually do this stuff, and included analysing and improving mining and mining refinement processes. It didn't matter the mineral/element they were targeting, we had equipment to make it happen.

The tech was never theirs, in a mining (start to finish) capacity. It was already western, they bought it. And like all good chinese companies, they then copied it and made half arsed versions of it. They even had the audacity to buy our parts that were proprietary, that they simply could not make immediately (I assume they worked it out eventually).

Interestingly, Gallium and Germanium were used in our old technologies that we sold to them. Our new tech doesn't need either of those. So any Rare Earth processing they have was derived from what the west had already achieved.

Unfortunately its the access to the actual mined elements that we want to consume that is the problem, its not the tech they stole from us in the first place.

I don't know anything about their Covid-19 gene editing splice kits, but I wouldn't trust their LIDAR. Probably burn you (or the pedestrian in front of you) retinas out!

[-] BrownianMotion@lemmy.world 124 points 8 months ago

Water got into the battery. Well that sounds like it is squarely a fault of Tesla and its QC or R&D. Who tf builds a car, with a battery, doesn't make sure that the battery and all other major components are IP68 rated for "full immersion up to a meter or more for 30 minutes" ?

Its a CAR. We have Fords to cross. And some RAIN fscked it up??!!

1

This comes with some fixes to the new openVPN system, and route-gateway was added (a big oversight imo). More updates to wireguard and improvements have been added, and are still ongoing.

Here are the full patch notes:

system: correctly set RFC 5424 on remote TLS system logging

system: remove hasGateways() and write DHCP router option unconditionally

system: avoid plugin system for gateways monitor status fetch

system: remove passing unused ifconfig data to Gateways class on static pages

system: remove passing unused ifconfig data on gateway monitor status fetch

system: remove the unused "alert interval" option from the gateway configuration

interfaces: calculate_ipv6_delegation_length() should take advanced and custom dhcp6c into account

interfaces: teach ifctl to dump all files and its data for an interface

interfaces: remove dead link/hint in GIF table

interfaces: avoid duplicating $vfaces array

interfaces: introduce interfaces_restart_by_device()

firewall: remove old __empty__ options trick from shaper model

firewall: update models for clarity

firmware: update model for clarity

ipsec: omit conditional authentication properties when not applicable on connections

ipsec: fix key pair generator for secp256k1 EC and add properer naming to GUI (contributed by Manuel Faux)

ipsec: allow the use of eap_id = %any in instances

openvpn: fix certificate list for client export when optional CA specified (contributed by Manuel Faux)

openvpn: add CARP VHID tracking for client instances

openvpn: add tun-mtu/fragment/mssfix combo for instances

openvpn: add "route-gateway" advanced option to CSO

openvpn: use new File::file_put_contents() wrapper for instances

openvpn: updated model and clarified "auth" default option

mvc: remove "non-functional" hints from form input elements

mvc: uppercase default label in BaseListField is more likely

ui: add bytes format to standard formatters list

plugins: os-ddclient 1.16[1]

plugins: os-frr 1.36[2]

plugins: os-wireguard 2.1[3]

plugins: os-tinc 1.7 adds support for "StrictSubnets" variable (contributed by andrewhotlab)

lang: update translations and add Polish

src: bring back netmap tun(4) ethernet header emulation (contributed by Sunny Valley Networks)

src: axgbe: gracefully handle i2c bus failures

src: bnxt: do not restart on VLAN changes

src: ice: do not restart on VLAN changes

src: net: do not overwrite VLAN PCP

src: net: remove VLAN metadata on PCP / VLAN encapsulation

src: if_vlan: always default to 802.1

src: iflib: fix panic during driver reload stress test

src: iflib: fix white space and reduce some line lengths

src: ixgbe: define IXGBE_LE32_TO_CPUS

src: ixgbe: check for fw_recovery

src: net80211: fail for unicast traffic without unicast key[4]

src: pcib: allocate the memory BAR with the MSI-X table[5]

ports: php 8.2.10[6]

ports: python 3.9.18[7]

ports: unbound 1.18.0[8]
1

This is an open ended question, it seems we need to encourage people to join here as well as being on their preferred platform (which is not ours to discourage or be derogatory about).

I still frequent the "that site" because I want to help - but honestly I dont want to help "that site". Not that I am really doing so.

However, it feels weird if I do have to say "we are also on fede.. blah blah" and lets be honest about this -- its less support, but by more knowledgeable people (??probably I believe so).

How do we get them (and lets face it, Franco) over here to support OSS.

I know Franco has paid subscriptions but opnsense is OSS, the community is more than happy to help out if it is not paywalled.

1
OPNsense 23.7.3 released (forum.opnsense.org)
[-] BrownianMotion@lemmy.world 47 points 10 months ago

I have been saying for a while now (10 years+) that internet should be treated like gas, electricity and water. Today its an essential service.

However, at least in OZ, ISPs are not accountable for outages, and should be.

Here, if electricity is out for a certain period, you can claim for spoilage and if its longer than a govt set period, the electricity company must pay you.

same for the other services (but rarely happens).

ISPs should be considered an essential service, and if they are out for 4hrs, then it should start costing by paying the customer.

And possibly there should be clauses for outages that have "catastrophic outcomes" (im not gonna define it, but you get the idea) should result in suitable claims for damages.

1
OPNsense 23.7.2 released (forum.opnsense.org)
[-] BrownianMotion@lemmy.world 73 points 10 months ago

If you want to make and add all these fees, I think it is only fair that your are required to list them all.

Stop hiding behind your pussy corporate bullshit, and take some responsibility for your money grabbing thoughtlessness.

Customers want to be able to determine who is of best value, and if you advertise $5 a month but add $45 of "fees" then you are just a cunt, and you don't deserve the business; even if your SUM TOTAL of $50 a month is less than some other ISP that just says its $54 a month and that's it.

If you are sneaking about and skirting shit like this, we can only assume you are like that at a corporate level, and everything you are doing is dodgy as fuck.

5

"What would you like?" says the bartender.

The seal replies, "anything but Canadian Club".

3

No perches necessary.

5

I stay up all night wondering if there really is a dog.

1

The Laminator.

4

Unfortunately the company folded.

5

Does that mean there is one person who enjoys it?

4

It's true, check your dictionary.

[-] BrownianMotion@lemmy.world 58 points 10 months ago

So everything is about right. Today you can buy a budget pc, and skim on performance, but back then (and I was there man!) you could not.

In 1985 HDD were only starting to gain traction for PC's and that was about the only thing you could spec up. That IBM pc is "High Res" which probably means it was VGA multicolour (yay!lol) with 640x480 resolution. So you were basically buying top of the line.

Today, if you were to build a top of the line PC, RTX4090, latest best intel cpu, PSU, etc, etc it would be easy to spend $5K!

But damn, the difference in performance from back then to now!! (That IBM is an XT which means it was a 4.77Mhz with 8086 cpu. Just looking at that picture, I can feel the weight of the bloody thing)

[-] BrownianMotion@lemmy.world 94 points 10 months ago

This.

I can handle DDMMYY[YY] it reads correctly. But YYYYMMDD is numerically correct, most signifcant to least significant digitwise.

That thing only American's do, is completely non-sensical.

[-] BrownianMotion@lemmy.world 73 points 11 months ago

Maybe they can stop releasing shit movies here as well, while they are at it?

[-] BrownianMotion@lemmy.world 55 points 11 months ago

It was quite hard to find any information on this, so I will post what I found.

https://domainincite.com/tag/freenom

https://tech.slashdot.org/story/23/05/26/2121222/phishing-domains-tanked-after-meta-sued-freenom

That second link is less relevant but interesting.

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BrownianMotion

joined 1 year ago