BrikoX
Have strong opinions, but welcome all civil discussions.
Mastodon: @[email protected]
- 1.68K Posts
- 355 Comments
BrikoX@lemmy.zipOPto Cybersecurity@sh.itjust.works•The US proposes rules to make healthcare data more secureEnglish11·6 months agoDefinitely. Once the company reach certain level of annual turnover it must implement A-Z security measures or be fined out of existence would be great. I even go as far as making it personal liability for upper management if they deliberately try to circumvent those requirements.
BrikoX@lemmy.zipOPto Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•Do you know any independent written news sources?English3·7 months agoAny as long as it’s in English.
BrikoX@lemmy.zipOPto Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•Do you know any independent written news sources?English3·7 months agoI specified written. Independent news commentators are everywhere since video format is still a profitable model, but they all rely on written news sources or random social media posts.
Unless you use Monero, it’s not private nor safe.
BrikoX@lemmy.zipto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Postiz (v1.6.6) - open-source social media scheduling toolEnglish11·8 months agoSince you deleted your post on [email protected], reposting my comment.
Another AI project that will probably be dead in a few months. Also open core not open source as many of the features are not available via self-hosted version.
Self-hosted version which source is available and hosted-version which is not public, are not the same. Or at the very least, planned to not be the same by your own admission as you talked publically about planning on adding paid-only features to hosted version.
Take out “AI features” and you are left with nothing, so yeah, AI project… It also relies on proprietary AI models that you don’t own, so it can stop working at any point and that would be out of your control.
BrikoX@lemmy.zipto Free and Open Source Software@beehaw.org•Postiz (v1.6.6) - open-source social media scheduling toolEnglish5·8 months agoSince you deleted your post on [email protected], reposting my comment.
Another AI project that will probably be dead in a few months. Also open core not open source as many of the features are not available via self-hosted version.
Self-hosted version which source is available and hosted-version which is not public, are not the same. Or at the very least, planned to not be the same by your own admission as you talked publically about planning on adding paid-only features to hosted version.
Take out “AI features” and you are left with nothing, so yeah, AI project… It also relies on proprietary AI models that you don’t own, so it can stop working at any point and that would be out of your control.
BrikoX@lemmy.zipOPto Cybersecurity@sh.itjust.works•1 bug, $50,000+ in bounties, how Zendesk intentionally left a backdoor in hundreds of Fortune 500 companiesEnglish7·9 months agoThat looks to be a troll. ZendeskTeam account was created 1 hour ago and is not part of the org.
But the help article linked is pathetic.
BrikoX@lemmy.zipto Cybersecurity@sh.itjust.works•A chat app using state-of-the-art cryptographyEnglish12·9 months agoDon’t take this as an insult, but you really need to come back when there is an independent audit that confirms the claims. Verifying cryptography is not something even a tech-savvy person can do, even if the source code is available.
BrikoX@lemmy.zipto Lemmy@lemmy.ml•Hot Take: Lemmy communities should function similar to hashtags on Mastodon.English38·9 months agoYour proposal seems to target the same issues as with multi-community support https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy/issues/818, which just got 6000€ funding from NLnet. Which seems to be a cleaner way of achieving the same goal.
Some suggested points are also against ActivityPub standard.
No audit, no 2FA, no transparency report, limited servers, proprietary clients. There are better options.
BrikoX@lemmy.zipOPto Cybersecurity@sh.itjust.works•North Korean hackers target Python devs with malware disguised as coding tests — hack has been underway for a yearEnglish2·10 months agoI noticed this today too, no idea what is going on. Need to reach out to the instance admin, since it’s only happening on my instance as far as I can see.
BrikoX@lemmy.zipOPto Cybersecurity@sh.itjust.works•Found: 280 Android apps that use OCR to steal cryptocurrency credentialsEnglish20·10 months agoMcAfee blog offers some more details: https://www.mcafee.com/blogs/other-blogs/mcafee-labs/new-android-spyagent-campaign-steals-crypto-credentials-via-image-recognition/
Added to the post body.
BrikoX@lemmy.zipto New Communities@lemmy.world•Fandoms - active communities promotion threadEnglish3·10 months agoSeveral of mine:
Gaming communities are hard to grow since they require people who play the game to participate. You can only grow it on your own so much by posting the latest news.
Other active ones on
lemmy.zip
:
BrikoX@lemmy.zipOPto Privacy Guides@lemmy.one•YubiKeys are vulnerable to cloning attacks thanks to newly discovered side channelEnglish16·10 months agoIt’s definitely not something a regular user should panic over. But it’s a huge deal since a lot of high security, sensitive targets also rely on the same library.
BrikoX@lemmy.zipOPto Privacy Guides@lemmy.one•YubiKeys are vulnerable to cloning attacks thanks to newly discovered side channelEnglish7·10 months agoWhile the researchers have confirmed all YubiKey 5 series models can be cloned, they haven’t tested other devices using the microcontroller, such as the SLE78 made by Infineon and successor microcontrollers known as the Infineon Optiga Trust M and the Infineon Optiga TPM. The researchers suspect that any device using any of these three microcontrollers and the Infineon cryptographic library contains the same vulnerability.
Both. The cryptographic library in question is also used in other cryptographic applications too, so it’s a huge mess.
BrikoX@lemmy.zipto Lemmy@lemmy.ml•Current discussion about post deduplication, should posts be hidden inside a community?English2·10 months agoIt is. Different clients handle it differently. If you note, the repository where the request is made is for lemmy-ui, not lemmy backend.
E.g. Photon shows a single item with a dropdown to expand matching posts if they were posted at the same, which is common with cross-posts on All, Local, Subscribed feeds.
And then it lists all cross-posts on individual pages in a neat list with stats like votes, number of comments, etc.
BrikoX@lemmy.zipto Free and Open Source Software@beehaw.org•Anyone been having problems with your Lemmy client? Eternity is kinda broken since an updateEnglish1·10 months agoIt’s not mentioned, but I think the compatibility layer for 1.19 releases breaks support for older versions. Ask your instance admins to update the backend.
BrikoX@lemmy.zipOPto Piracy: ꜱᴀɪʟ ᴛʜᴇ ʜɪɢʜ ꜱᴇᴀꜱ@lemmy.dbzer0.com•[Video] Disney creates best argument for piracy in a centuryEnglish20·10 months agoThe video is 2 part, first is the summary of the case and another is about why this argument from Disney is the biggest pro piracy argument.
Basically, the case is about a doctor who had a food allergy and went to a Disney owned restaurant that promised to cater to people with food allergies. The doctor asked staff 5 times to make sure they were aware of her allergies, and all 5 times they said yes. It’s literally the most straightforward wrongful death case ever. But then Disney decided they want to fuck more people over, so they made an argument that the case should tossed and move to arbitration because her husband signed up to Disney streaming service on a free trial, years ago. And Disney is ignoring a lot of other facts, like that husband is not the one suing, her estate is, he cancelled the trial before the period ended, so he wasn’t even a subscriber at the time. The streaming site has an arbitration clause, but Disney park doesn’t so it doesn’t even matter. If the case can’t go forward, it will be only because US is a corporate-owned shithole, legally it’s a moot argument.
As far as piracy, it just highlights how fucked up everything is since if the husband just pirated, DIsney couldn’t have used that argument in court. So Disney created a situation now that if you want to be able to sue them for your loved one’s death - pirate Disney. It’s the most pro piracy argument that even the biggest normies can relate to.
BrikoX@lemmy.zipOPto Cybersecurity@sh.itjust.works•The nation’s best hackers found vulnerabilities in voting machines — but no time to fix themEnglish1·11 months agoAre there countries that have e-voting on a national level apart from Estonia? They had it since 2005 without any major issues.
Full of them in US equipment though.