

All Jupiter Broadcasting Shows
Jupiter Broadcasting
Every audio version of Jupiter Broadcasting's productions.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Apr 9, 2018 • 0sec
No Bad Guys Only Survivors | CR 304
What we can learn from Mike’s first business failing in 2014? Mike shares some necessary balance to today’s celebrity CEO “stories”. And we discuss how having naive expectations, avoiding conflict, and a lack of focus can sneak up on you and hurt your business.
Also some tips on how to change your expectations, embrace conflict, and maybe even be a bit ruthless.

Apr 8, 2018 • 0sec
Linux Action News 48
The Linux kernel gets a spring cleaning, things are going well for RISC-V, and Linux-Libre is clearly prioritizing freedom over security with their recent update.
Steam Machines were pronounced dead and then alive this week, we'll try and clear things up, and Mozilla has a new project.
Episode Links: inuxactionnews.com/48

Apr 5, 2018 • 0sec
Rebuilding it Better | TechSNAP 362
It’s a TechSNAP introduction to Terraform, a tool for building, changing, and versioning infrastructure safely and efficiently.
Plus a recent spat of data leaks suggest a common theme, Microsoft’s self inflicted Total Meltdown flaw, and playing around with DNS Rebinding attacks for fun.
The Under Armour Hack Was Even Worse Than It Had To Be
Under Armour Inc (UAA.N) (UA.N) said on Thursday that data from some 150 million MyFitnessPal diet and fitness app accounts was compromised in February, in one of the biggest hacks in history, sending shares of the athletic apparel maker down 3 percent in after-hours trade.
Panerabread.com Leaks Millions of Customer Records
The data available in plain text from Panera’s site appeared to include records for any customer who has signed up for an account to order food online via panerabread.com.
No, Panera Bread Doesn’t Take Security Seriously
tl;dr: In August 2017, I reported a vulnerability to Panera Bread that allowed the full name, home address, email address, food/dietary preferences, username, phone number, birthday and last four digits of a saved credit card to be accessed in bulk for any user that had ever signed up for an account. This includes my own personal data! Despite an explicit acknowledgement of the issue and a promise to fix it, Panera Bread sat on the vulnerability and, as far as I can tell, did nothing about it for eight months. When Brian Krebs publicly broke the news, other news outlets emphasized the usual “We take your security very seriously, security is a top priority for us” prepared statement from Panera Bread. Worse still, the vulnerability was not fixed at all — which means the company either misrepresented its actual security posture to the media to save face or was not competent enough to determine this fact for themselves. This post establishes a canonical timeline so subsequent reporting doesn’t get confused.
Total Meltdown?
Meet the Windows 7 Meltdown patch from January. It stopped Meltdown but opened up a vulnerability way worse ... It allowed any process to read the complete memory contents at gigabytes per second, oh - it was possible to write to arbitrary memory as well.
Terraform
HashiCorp Terraform enables you to safely and predictably create, change, and improve infrastructure. It is an open source tool that codifies APIs into declarative configuration files that can be shared amongst team members, treated as code, edited, reviewed, and versioned.
Terraforming 1Password
Compared to the JSON or YAML files used by CloudFormation, Terraform HCL is both a more powerful and a more readable language. Here is a small example of a snippet that defines a subnet for the application servers. As you can see, the Terraform code is a quarter of the size, more readable, and easier to understand.
Feedback
Whonow: A malicious DNS server for executing DNS Rebinding attacks on the fly

Apr 4, 2018 • 0sec
Testing Russia's Nerves | Unfilter 275
Russia has launched a diplomatic counter-offensive, demanding that its scientists be involved in investigating the reported poisoning of former spies, Trump plans to send the Coast Guard to the border, and that’s just the highlights.
We also talk about PBS’s “exclusive” look at the US’s “Cyber Defense”, discuss the latest in the Muller investigation, and end it all on a great high-note.

Apr 4, 2018 • 0sec
TCP Blackbox Recording | BSD Now 240
New ZFS features landing in FreeBSD, MAP_STACK for OpenBSD, how to write safer C code with Clang’s address sanitizer, Michael W. Lucas on sponsor gifts, TCP blackbox recorder, and Dell disk system hacking.

Apr 3, 2018 • 0sec
What's Coming Next | Ask Noah Show 57
It's been one year of non-stop unapologetic Linux content! We meet up with fans in Minneapolis for a live show and tell you about our exciting plans as we kick of year 2 of the Ask Noah Show.
-- The Cliff Notes --
Apple Switches to Own Processors
The Condom Challenge
LXDE Adding a Custom Shortcut
See How the Ask Noah Show Got Started (video)
VoxTeleSys
-- Stay In Touch --
Find all the resources for this show on the Ask Noah Dashboard
Ask Noah Dashboard
Need more help than a radio show can offer? Altispeed provides commercial IT services and they’re excited to offer you a great deal for listening to the Ask Noah Show. Call today and ask about the discount for listeners of the Ask Noah Show!
Altispeed Technologies
Contact Noah
asknoah [at] jupiterbroadcasting.com
-- Twitter --
Noah - Kernellinux
Ask Noah Show
Altispeed Technologies
Jupiter Broadcasting

Apr 3, 2018 • 0sec
The Stallman Directive | LUP 243
Richard Stallman has some practical steps society could take to roll back the rampant and expanding invasion of our privacy. But his suggestions leave us asking some larger questions.
Plus the latest on the march to Juno, some fun app picks, a quick look at Qubes OS 4.0, community news, and more.
Follow Up / Catch Up
Valve has removed the Steam Machine section from Steam
In a move that's not exactly surprising, Valve has quietly removed the Steam Machine section from Steam.
Apple Is Looking For Linux Kernel Developers
For reasons unknown, Apple is looking to hire Linux kernel developers in both Texas and California.
Canonical's Snappy Now Supports Latest Nvidia Drivers on Ubuntu 18.04 LTS
Snapd 2.32.2 is now available to download and should be coming soon to the stable software repositories of your favorite, Snappy-enabled GNU/Linux distribution. What's exciting about this release is that it enables Snappy the use Nvidia's most recent proprietary graphics drivers in Snap apps on Ubuntu 18.04 LTS (Bionic Beaver) and similar operating systems.
lsof to graphviz
A small utility to convert Unix lsof output to a graph showing FIFO and UNIX interprocess communication.
TING
**Ting - mobile that makes sense
Old CPUs losing support in Linux, cutting size by 500,000 lines of code
The architectures which will become deprecated are Blackfin, CRIS, FRV, M32R, Metag, MN10300, Score and Tile. Although not being deprecated, the Unicore32 and Hexagon architectures are also at risk but their maintainers are working on improving the situation so their support can be continued.
Juno Progress for March – elementary OS
You get more features, and you get more features, and you get more features!
GnuCash 3.0 Released
DigitalOcean
DigitalOcean: SSD Cloud Server, VPS Server, Simple Cloud Hosting
Qubes OS 4.0 has been released!
Version 4.0 includes several fundamental improvements to the security
and functionality of Qubes OS:
The Qubes Admin API
Qubes Core Stack version 3
Fully virtualized VMs for enhanced security
Multiple, flexible Disposable VM templates
A more expressive, user-friendly Qubes RPC policy
system
A powerful new VM volume manager that makes it easy to keep VMs on
external drives
Enhanced TemplateVM security via split packages and network
interface removal
More secure backups with scrypt for stronger key
derivation and enforced encryption
Rewritten command-line tools with new options
oragono
Oragono is a modern, experimental IRC server written in Go. It's designed to be simple to setup and use, and it includes features such as UTF-8 nicks / channel names, client accounts with SASL, and other assorted IRCv3 support.
Linux Academy
Linux Academy | Linux and AWS Online Training
A Radical Proposal to keep your personal data safe | Richard Stallman
The surveillance imposed on us today far exceeds that of the Soviet Union. For freedom and democracy’s sake, we need to eliminate most of it. There are so many ways to use data to hurt people that the only safe database is the one that was never collected. Thus, instead of the EU’s approach of mainly regulating how personal data may be used (in its General Data Protection Regulation or GDPR), I propose a law to stop systems from collecting personal data.
Overview | FreedomBox Private Cloud Server

Apr 2, 2018 • 0sec
Weapons of Mass Data | CR 303
What is focus for the software industry? And is focus always a good thing, or can it lead to tunnel vision? Plus we spend a bit more time saluting Sun Microsystems for their contribution to our industry.
Plus some feedback, a bit of weekly Hoopla, and more!

Apr 2, 2018 • 0sec
Pen is Mightier | User Error 47
The two sides of the pond meet this week when Joe Ressington joins Chris and Noah to discuss why Chris only has 26 years left to live, some hard questions about gun ownership, and Cloudflare launching a new DNS service…
But something doesn’t smell right.. Maybe it’s the important animal flatulence facts, and why we think the Kodi project might be facing a crisis.
00:00:00 - Chris only has 26 years left to live
00:01:47 - Joe fosters cats
00:14:02 - Kodi has a branding problem
00:25:05 - Gun facts
00:55:18 - Cloudflare DNS
01:01:40 - Do birds fart?

Apr 1, 2018 • 0sec
Linux Action News 47
ChromeOS comes to tablets, and we ponder why... Google removes Kodi from autocomplete results in an apparent bow to pressure, Firefox combats Facebook tracking, and Oracle vs Google is back for their biggest fight yet.


