>What would make it less depressing? Multiple factors. Basically the whole starting point was when my fam moved away from England and came back to France. So I guess my psyche wouldn't have gone so bad if they wouldn't have moved. Getting beaten up by a few local kids too. If I had learned French when I was five years old it would have been a big positive change too, I would have been a lot less of a freak. Never seeing my parents due to their work was also a problem. And a lot more In some sense I'd wish to never have these past events, bu I don't want to reject what I am today. But I do wish people to avoid such mistreatment, in some sense I'm lucky because I isolated myself from everything for a long time, otherwise I would have probably be dragged by other unstable people.
@verita84 @sim >Free to roam a metal cage with silicon It's more about finding a freedom of expression about being useful rather than software freedom. I was VERY far from software freedom when I started. I'm still far tho.
>The security team behind the "npm" repository for JavaScript libraries removed two npm packages this Monday for containing malicious code that installed a remote access trojan (RAT) on the computers of developers working on JavaScript projects. >techrepublic cheat sheet > >The name of the two packages was jdb.js and db-json.js., and both were created by the same author and described themselves as tools to help developers work with JSON files typically generated by database applications. > >Both packages were uploaded on the npm package registry last week and were downloaded more than 100 times before their malicious behavior was detected by Sonatype, a company that scans package repositories on a regular basis. > >According to Sonatype's Ax Sharma, the two packages contained a malicious script that executed after web developers imported and installed any of the two malicious libraries. > >The post-install script performed basic reconnaissance of the infected host and then attempted to download and run a file named patch.exe (VT scan) that later installed njRAT, also known as Bladabindi, a very popular remote access trojan that has been used in espionage and data theft operations since 2015. > >To make sure the njRAT download wouldn't have any issues, Sharma said the patch.exe loader also modified the local Windows firewall to add a rule to whitelist its command and control (C&C) server before pinging back its operator and initiating the RAT download. > >All of this behavior was contained in the jdb.js package only, while the second package, db-json.js, loaded the first in an attempt to disguise its malicious behavior. >...
@Mitsu @guizzy That's because it's a magnet for torrenting, you either need qBittorrent or Deluge on your PC to download the Xmas movie. I thought you'd want to watch it with guizzy idk.