It’s a sign that you’re winning a war when you need to jail your own researchers and scientists, right?
It’s a sign that you’re winning a war when you need to jail your own researchers and scientists, right?
I’m not sure I necessarily agree. Your assessment is correct, but I don’t really think this situation is security by obscurity. Like most things in computer security, you have to weight the pros and cons to each approach.
Yubico used components that all passed Common Criteria certification and built their product in a read-only configuration to prevent any potential shenanigans with vulnerable firmware updates. This approach almost entirely protects them from supply-chain attacks like what happened with ZX a few months back.
To exploit this vulnerability you need physical access to the device, a ton of expensive equipment, and an incredibly deep knowledge in digital cryptography. This is effectively a non-issue for your average Yubikey user. The people this does affect will be retiring and replacing their Yubikeys with the newest models ASAP.
Absolutely. If you are the CISO in a place where security is a top priority with adversaries that may have access to the equipment and knowledge to exploit this, you will absolutely want to retire the keys ASAP and replace them with the new model that is not vulnerable to this.
And she was the best premier we ever had despite what the bumper stickers on every lifted F150 would have you believe.
Health care up here is controlled at the province level. Alberta is basically Texas, in that for the last century, it’s been controlled by a huge conservative majority.
If Alberta actually forces this through, I know I’m not the only one that will be looking to move.
Yes. She’s female and was born female.
It’s illegal to be transgender in Algeria, and the only complaint came from a Russian boxing body with a history of making suspect claims in the past.
NTP is the one that comes to mind for me.
Basically every device uses it and until fairly recently was maintained by a single person
believe it or not, jail.
I tend to just check uptime before asking this question.
If I see the machine has been up for weeks and they tell me they rebooted it, I know i’m dealing with someone who doesn’t know that pressing the power button on the monitor doesn’t turn the computer off.
While many of the CVEs are filed in good faith by responsible researchers and represent credible security vulnerabilities, a recently growing pattern involves newbie security enthusiasts and bug bounty hunters ostensibly “collecting” CVEs to enrich their resume rather than reporting security bugs that constitute real-world, practical impact from exploitation.
Oh, this is once again HR’s fault
Both Tales of Symphonia and Chrono Cross got abysmal PC ports.
Playing the originals in an emulator is definitely a much better experience
She was invited to meet with the principal, who De Meyer says told her the school was up to code.
“Im sorry you’re having trouble, but understand that we are doing the legal bare minimum to help you people out”
Man, that fucking sucks.
I lost my sense of smell for about a month when I got Covid for the first time and it was torture.
This is explicitly against their TOS. Whether or not you’ll be found out is a whole other matter
The argument is that “we would like to study these works of art in a purely academic setting, and are willing to limit access to academics only, we just need to make sure it’s going to work even if you guys stop supporting it”
The corporations involved seem to read this argument as “we are looking to start a game streaming service, please give us free access to all your games to distribute at our whim”
It’s good opsec to have a VPN when torrenting but thats largely due to the risk of being identified commiting a crime.(Or at the very least, having your ISP send you an angry letter about copyright infringement)
If thats not part of your threat model, then you dont need to worry.
The first game is pretty rough around the edges but pretty fun.
The sequel is a masterpiece.
The Internet Archive is right up there with Wikipedia in terms of public good they have done.
It’s a travesty thet they even need to fight this.
He also claimed Ottawa’s push into pharmacare could dismantle private drug insurance and leave Canadians with inferior coverage and higher taxes to pay for it all.
Cool, my private insurance currently costs $103/month. How much will my taxes go up? If its less than that, then its a good deal.
This feels like a promise that they’ll step in as soon as its clear an actual strike will happen. All Air Canada has to do is refuse to compromise and the government will fix it for them.