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Notices by Ross Schulman (ross@social.rbs.io)

  1. Ross Schulman (ross@social.rbs.io)'s status on Tuesday, 21-May-2019 14:05:04 EDT Ross Schulman Ross Schulman

    What might a future without the big #platforms look like? How can we combine cheap computing like @Raspberry_Pi with new protocols like @dat_project, @IPFSbot, ActivityPub, and Secure Scuttlebutt to build #decentralized portable servers?

    Check out my thoughts: https://rbs.io/2019/05/a-revolution-in-your-pocket/

    In conversation Tuesday, 21-May-2019 14:05:04 EDT from social.rbs.io permalink

    Attachments

    1. Invalid filename.
      A Revolution In Your Pocket
      from Think Deeply and Rebuild Things
      Internet users have been trained over the past decade or so to believe the argument that the services we have grown to think of as “the internet” are expensive to run and that the only way to pay for those services is to let ourselves be tracked everywhere in the service of advertising. Our concepts of privacy, particularly when we talk about laws and regulations, are often presumed to take place solely within this frame.
  2. Ross Schulman (ross@social.rbs.io)'s status on Friday, 03-May-2019 11:40:31 EDT Ross Schulman Ross Schulman
    in reply to
    • Parker Higgins

    @xor
    It makes you feel almost special and infuriated at the same time.

    In conversation Friday, 03-May-2019 11:40:31 EDT from social.rbs.io permalink
  3. Ross Schulman (ross@social.rbs.io)'s status on Friday, 06-Jul-2018 01:38:39 EDT Ross Schulman Ross Schulman

    We're looking for awesome #decentralization proposals for #MozFest2018! Submit ideas here: mozillafestival.org/proposals RT for exposure!

    In conversation Friday, 06-Jul-2018 01:38:39 EDT from social.rbs.io permalink
  4. Ross Schulman (ross@social.rbs.io)'s status on Monday, 16-Oct-2017 10:02:57 EDT Ross Schulman Ross Schulman

    Not a good morning for cybersecurity... KRACK attack affects WPA2, the protocol that runs basically every encrypted WiFi network. https://www.krackattacks.com/

    The ROCA attack identifies a massive number of RSA 1024 and 2048 bit keys (including, I'm told, potentially all of those created by a YubiKey 4) are factorable. https://crocs.fi.muni.cz/public/papers/rsa_ccs17

    In conversation Monday, 16-Oct-2017 10:02:57 EDT from social.rbs.io permalink
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