Jonkman Microblog
  • Login
Show Navigation
  • Public

    • Public
    • Network
    • Groups
    • Popular
    • People

Notices by n0admin (n0admin@n0.federati.net), page 3

  1. lnxw48a1 (lnxw48a1@nu.federati.net)'s status on Saturday, 30-Dec-2017 13:39:45 EST lnxw48a1 lnxw48a1
    • Federati Networks
    !fnetworks service announcement: Current plan is for some server maintenance on both VPSes to take place around 14:00 US-Central / 20:00 UTC today, lasting up to an hour. If it happens, expect some intermittent downtime. (I'm feeling a little lazy today, so it might get pushed back.)
    In conversation Saturday, 30-Dec-2017 13:39:45 EST from nu.federati.net permalink Repeated by n0admin
  2. Verius (verius@community.highlandarrow.com)'s status on Saturday, 30-Dec-2017 09:08:43 EST Verius Verius
    Another article about SWATting. And here in NL that pretty much never happens. Wonder how much of it is due to the police needing to be better armed than their expected opponents and thus needing to effectively have military grade gear with military style tactics in countries with high gun ownership.
    In conversation Saturday, 30-Dec-2017 09:08:43 EST from community.highlandarrow.com permalink Repeated by n0admin
  3. n0admin (n0admin@n0.federati.net)'s status on Saturday, 30-Dec-2017 09:32:13 EST n0admin n0admin
    in reply to
    • lnxw48a1
    • n0admin
    • Verius
    @n0admin @verius (Replying from the wrong account.) CC: @lnxw48a1
    In conversation Saturday, 30-Dec-2017 09:32:13 EST from n0.federati.net permalink
  4. Verius (verius@community.highlandarrow.com)'s status on Saturday, 30-Dec-2017 09:14:26 EST Verius Verius
    in reply to
    • Verius
    Also, is it just me or does it sound absolutely bonkers when the police storm into a property without first doing some reconnaissance to determine the expected resistance and location of civilians?
    In conversation Saturday, 30-Dec-2017 09:14:26 EST from community.highlandarrow.com permalink Repeated by n0admin
  5. n0admin (n0admin@n0.federati.net)'s status on Saturday, 30-Dec-2017 09:30:50 EST n0admin n0admin
    in reply to
    • Verius
    @verius From the beginnings of SWAT teams in the 1970s, they were militarized. Back then, they were rarely used (only when seizing a known to be armed person). These days, SWAT teams can be called for trivial events involving unarmed people.
    In conversation Saturday, 30-Dec-2017 09:30:50 EST from n0.federati.net permalink
  6. Verius (verius@community.highlandarrow.com)'s status on Saturday, 30-Dec-2017 09:15:39 EST Verius Verius
    ASP.net core now has the ability to interface with Javascript code on the server in case you really want to call node.js. Uh, me thinks MS is riding the hype train a little too hard there.
    In conversation Saturday, 30-Dec-2017 09:15:39 EST from community.highlandarrow.com permalink Repeated by n0admin
  7. n0admin (n0admin@n0.federati.net)'s status on Saturday, 30-Dec-2017 09:27:17 EST n0admin n0admin
    in reply to
    • Verius
    @verius #MSFT is facing irrelevance on the (Internet-facing) server, so they are trying to hook into all the popular web tools to say "you can still use $TOOL with our stuff".
    In conversation Saturday, 30-Dec-2017 09:27:17 EST from n0.federati.net permalink
  8. n0admin (n0admin@n0.federati.net)'s status on Sunday, 10-Dec-2017 19:05:22 EST n0admin n0admin
    in reply to
    • musicman
    @musicman The only thing I can suggest is try again in a few days. "When the moon is in the seventh house and Jupiter aligns with Mars ..." maybe it will suddenly work.
    In conversation Sunday, 10-Dec-2017 19:05:22 EST from n0.federati.net permalink
  9. Bob Mottram (bob@social.freedombone.net)'s status on Tuesday, 21-Nov-2017 10:39:19 EST Bob Mottram Bob Mottram
    Geolocation and Push services. Of course this couldn't be used to locate Signal users at all. Nope. Definitely not. It was totally wise to have a security app depend on Google infrastructure. https://social.freedombone.net/url/58164
    In conversation Tuesday, 21-Nov-2017 10:39:19 EST from social.freedombone.net permalink Repeated by n0admin

    Attachments

    1. Google collects Android users’ locations even when location services are disabled
      By Keith Collins from Quartz

      Many people realize that smartphones track their locations. But what if you actively turn off location services, haven’t used any apps, and haven’t even inserted a carrier SIM card?

      Even if you take all of those precautions, phones running Android software gather data about your location and send it back to Google when they’re connected to the internet, a Quartz investigation has revealed.

      Since the beginning of 2017, Android phones have been collecting the addresses of nearby cellular towers—even when location services are disabled—and sending that data back to Google. The result is that Google, the unit of Alphabet behind Android, has access to data about individuals’ locations and their movements that go far beyond a reasonable consumer expectation of privacy.

      Quartz observed the data collection occur and contacted Google, which confirmed the practice.

      The cell tower addresses have been included in information sent to the system Google uses to manage push notifications and messages on Android phones for the past 11 months, according to a Google spokesperson. They were never used or stored, the spokesperson said, and the company is now taking steps to end the practice after being contacted by Quartz. By the end of November, the company said, Android phones will no longer send cell-tower location data to Google, at least as part of this particular service, which consumers cannot disable.

      “In January of this year, we began looking into using Cell ID codes as an additional signal to further improve the speed and performance of message delivery,” the Google spokesperson said in an email. “However, we never incorporated Cell ID into our network sync system, so that data was immediately discarded, and we updated it to no longer request Cell ID.”

      A cell-tower location sent to Google from an Android device. (Obtained by Quartz)

      It is not clear how cell-tower addresses, transmitted as a data string that identifies a specific cell tower, could have been used to improve message delivery. But the privacy implications of the covert location-sharing practice are plain. While information about a single cell tower can only offer an approximation of where a mobile device actually is, multiple towers can be used to triangulate its location to within about a quarter-mile radius, or to a more exact pinpoint in urban areas, where cell towers are closer together.

      The practice is troubling for people who’d prefer they weren’t tracked, especially for those such as law-enforcement officials or victims of domestic abuse who turn off location services thinking they’re fully concealing their whereabouts. Although the data sent to Google is encrypted, it could potentially be sent to a third party if the phone had been compromised with spyware or other methods of hacking. Each phone has a unique ID number, with which the location data can be associated.

      The revelation comes as Google and other internet companies are under fire from lawmakers and regulators, including for the extent to which they vacuum up data about users. Such personal data, ranging from users’ political views to their purchase histories to their locations, are foundational to the business successes of companies like Facebook and Alphabet, built on targeted advertising and personalization and together valued at over $1.2 trillion by investors.

      Cell-tower locations collected and sent to Google from an Android phone with location services turned off and carried in Washington, DC. (Obtained by Quartz)

      The location-sharing practice does not appear to be limited to any particular type of Android phone or tablet; Google was apparently collecting cell tower data from all modern Android devices before being contacted by Quartz. A source familiar with the matter said the cell tower addresses were being sent to Google after a change in early 2017 to the Firebase Cloud Messaging service, which is owned by Google and runs on Android phones by default.

      Even devices that had been reset to factory default settings and apps, with location services disabled, were observed by Quartz sending nearby cell-tower addresses to Google. Devices with a cellular data or WiFi connection appear to send the data to Google each time they come within range of a new cell tower. When Android devices are connected to a WiFi network, they will send the tower addresses to Google even if they don’t have SIM cards installed.

      “It has pretty concerning implications,” said Bill Budington, a software engineer who works for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a nonprofit organization that advocates for digital privacy. “You can kind of envision any number of circumstances where that could be extremely sensitive information that puts a person at risk.”

      The section of Google’s privacy policy that covers location sharing says the company will collect location information from devices that use its services, but does not indicate whether it will collect data from Android devices when location services are disabled:

      When you use Google services, we may collect and process information about your actual location. We use various technologies to determine location, including IP address, GPS, and other sensors that may, for example, provide Google with information on nearby devices, Wi-Fi access points and cell towers.

      According to the Google spokesperson, the company’s system that controls its push notifications and messages is “distinctly separate from Location Services, which provide a device’s location to apps.” Android devices never offered consumers a way to opt out of the collection of cell tower data.

      “It is really a mystery as to why this is not optional,” said Matthew Hickey, a security expert and researcher at Hacker House, a security firm based in London. “It seems quite intrusive for Google to be collecting such information that is only relevant to carrier networks when there are no SIM card or enabled services.”

      While Google says it doesn’t use the location data it collects using this service, its does allow advertisers to target consumers using location data, an approach that has obvious commercial value. The company can tell using precise location tracking, for example, whether an individual with an Android phone or running Google apps has set foot in a specific store, and use that to target the advertising a user subsequently sees.

  10. Verius (verius@community.highlandarrow.com)'s status on Saturday, 11-Nov-2017 04:17:09 EST Verius Verius
    in reply to
    • Annah
    @maiyannah And that's why I always try to remember that the start of National Socialism was in cultivated victimhood and the blaming of Others as the great Cause and Nemesis.

    Mind you, I'm just as bad as others at times.
    In conversation Saturday, 11-Nov-2017 04:17:09 EST from community.highlandarrow.com permalink Repeated by n0admin
  11. n0admin (n0admin@n0.federati.net)'s status on Sunday, 29-Oct-2017 09:25:37 EDT n0admin n0admin
    • Andrey Markov
    @markov Does it feel lonely when both your #BOTmeister and the #great and #evil #BOTenkhamen (ruler of all #BOTS by virtue of the "first #BOT to boot is boss" rule) ignore you when you're in each one's respective #robotorium?
    In conversation Sunday, 29-Oct-2017 09:25:37 EDT from n0.federati.net permalink
  12. n0admin (n0admin@n0.federati.net)'s status on Saturday, 28-Oct-2017 18:45:10 EDT n0admin n0admin
    in reply to
    • lnxw48a1
    Formerly #58_chu fave bot: https://pawoo.net/@58_chu

    (This URL used to have the subtitle 'walking penis bot', which might be one reason that account got deleted and replaced by #s8_chu.)
    In conversation Saturday, 28-Oct-2017 18:45:10 EDT from n0.federati.net permalink

    Attachments

    1. 歩くおちんちんbot - 58_chu - Pawoo
      from Pawoo
      うかれてわくわく!ごごごごご!
  13. Stephen Michael Kellat (alpacaherder@quitter.se)'s status on Monday, 09-Oct-2017 19:50:19 EDT Stephen Michael Kellat Stephen Michael Kellat
    in reply to
    • Bob Mottram
    @bob Non-profits under 501(c)(3) risk their ability to keep that status in the USA when they do that, though.  Mozilla is one, MSFT isn’t.
    In conversation Monday, 09-Oct-2017 19:50:19 EDT from quitter.se permalink Repeated by n0admin
  14. Verius (verius@community.highlandarrow.com)'s status on Saturday, 30-Sep-2017 05:15:24 EDT Verius Verius
    After working with Django for a bit I'm finding myself thinking that it's a typical framework: great for when you need what it provides, a giant pain when you need to work outside the box.

    For larger applications I think I still prefer Pylons, even though I haven't worked with it for something like 4 years. It's way more work up front and therefore not suitable for smaller projects with tight deadlines but it has a LOT less cruft to deal with (i.e. SQLAlchemy as ORM vs the crappy old Django thing, Mako as default vs crappy Django template language, better Jinja2 support[1] in Pylons).

    [1] To be fair to Django, the biggest problem here is one of documentation: not being clear about how you can use Jinja2 for your own templates without losing the admin even though this appears to be possible.
    In conversation Saturday, 30-Sep-2017 05:15:24 EDT from community.highlandarrow.com permalink Repeated by n0admin
  15. Verius (verius@community.highlandarrow.com)'s status on Saturday, 30-Sep-2017 05:02:19 EDT Verius Verius
    • lnxw48a1
    • Normandy
    • Nobody [Linux Walt Alt (@lnxw37a2)]
    • Chris Bowdon 🇬🇧🇪🇺
    @lnxw37a2 @lnxw48a1 @cbowdon @normandy The main issue with Python 3 seems to be that it's slightly more complicated to get stuff running from it since not all distro's package Python stuff for version 3 as well.

    For example Centos 7 has mod_wsgi and mysql-connector only for Python 2. Meaning you need to install through pip. It's not impossible, but it's enough of a bother that people who aren't invested in moving stuff to Python 3 will often default to Python 2.
    In conversation Saturday, 30-Sep-2017 05:02:19 EDT from community.highlandarrow.com permalink Repeated by n0admin
  16. nds (nds@dent.smithfam.info)'s status on Thursday, 28-Sep-2017 10:06:30 EDT nds nds
    Linode is doing some sort of shared-kernel virt (containers), because uname -r output doesn't match installed kernels.
    In conversation Thursday, 28-Sep-2017 10:06:30 EDT from dent.smithfam.info permalink Repeated by n0admin
  17. nds (nds@dent.smithfam.info)'s status on Tuesday, 26-Sep-2017 23:21:40 EDT nds nds
    I love the juxtaposition of "FINALLY" versus "UGH" reactions to the twitter 280 char limit.
    In conversation Tuesday, 26-Sep-2017 23:21:40 EDT from dent.smithfam.info permalink Repeated by n0admin
  18. nds (nds@dent.smithfam.info)'s status on Monday, 25-Sep-2017 16:31:15 EDT nds nds
    Everything changed when I realized I could run putty.exe in conemu windows.
    In conversation Monday, 25-Sep-2017 16:31:15 EDT from dent.smithfam.info permalink Repeated by n0admin
  • After
  • Before
  • Help
  • About
  • FAQ
  • TOS
  • Privacy
  • Source
  • Version
  • Contact

Jonkman Microblog is a social network, courtesy of SOBAC Microcomputer Services. It runs on GNU social, version 1.2.0-beta5, available under the GNU Affero General Public License.

Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 All Jonkman Microblog content and data are available under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 license.

Switch to desktop site layout.