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Mar 29, 2018 • 0sec
The Return To ptrace | BSD Now 239
OpenBSD firewalling Windows 10, NetBSD’s return to ptrace, TCP Alternative Backoff, the BSD Poetic license, and AsiaBSDcon 2018 videos available.

Mar 29, 2018 • 0sec
Staring into Sun | CR 302
Sun Microsystems was fertile ground for what might be the largest developer upset in ten years. We look back at some of the real innovations Sun brought us, discuss the latest developments in Oracle's suit against Google, and the massive shift Microsoft announced today.
This is one of those episodes we’ll be referencing back to for quite a while.
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Hoopla
Google Could Owe Oracle $8.8 Billion in Android Fight
Google’s use of Java wasn’t ‘fair use,’ appeals court rules
Backlash against tech companies is a wake-up cal
"Techlash" is having an impact. With growing awareness of threats to privacy, access and innovation, as well as increasing suspicion of super-conglomerates in the areas of search, content, e-commerce and social media, we're finally seeing pervasive pessimism yield some change. But there's still a long way to go.
Snapchat is building the same kind of data-sharing API that just got Facebook into trouble
Snapchat is building a way for people to use their Snapchat account to connect with third-party apps. The idea, in theory, would let Snapchat users grant outside companies access to their Snapchat data to help personalize other services.
Windows chief Myerson out in Microsoft reorganization
Statement on LinkedIn
Microsoft is carving up Myerson's Windows and Devices Group (WDG), moving some pieces of it into one of two new engineering units announced this morning.

Mar 29, 2018 • 0sec
It’s All in the Logs | TechSNAP 361
Embarrassing flaws get exposed when the logs get reviewed, Atlanta city government gets shut down by Ransomware, and the cleverest little Android malware you’ll ever meet.
Plus we go from a hacked client to a Zero-day discovery, answer some questions, ask a few, and more!
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Uh Oh! Unified Logs in High Sierra (10.13) Show Plaintext Password for APFS Encrypted External Volumes via Disk Utility.app
It may not be noticeable at first (apart from the highlighting I’ve added of course), but the text “frogger13” is the password I used on a newly created APFS formatted FileVault Encrypted USB drive with the volume name “SEKRET”. (The new class images have a WarGames theme, hence the shout-outs to classic video games!)
Thousands of servers found leaking 750MB worth of passwords and keys
Giovanni Collazo said a quick query on the Shodan search engine returned almost 2,300 Internet-exposed servers running etcd, a type of database that computing clusters and other types of networks use to store and distribute passwords and configuration settings needed by various servers and applications. etcd comes with a programming interface that responds to simple queries that by default return administrative login credentials without first requiring authentication. The passwords, encryption keys, and other forms of credentials are used to access MySQL and PostgreSQL databases, content management systems, and other types of production servers.
Atlanta city government systems down due to ransomware attack
FBI called in as some city services are interrupted, employees told to turn off PCs.
Android malware found inside apps downloaded 500,000 times
The malware was sneaked onto the Google Play store disguised as seven different apps -- six QR readers and one 'smart compass' -- and bypassed security checks by hiding its true intent with a combination of clever coding and delaying its initial burst of malicious activity.
From hacked client to 0day discovery
We will discover in this article how a recent incident response to a customer was handled and how we discovered an otherwise publicly unknown vulnerability that was never reported by the manufacturer which left thousands of users unprotected from this security flaw.
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Mar 28, 2018 • 0sec
The Bolton Bomb | Unfilter 274
Fox pundit, world renowned war-hawk, and now Trump’s National Security Advisor. We take a look at John Bolton, and the bomb first ask questions second kind of policy he advocates.
Plus Stormy Daniels goes on 60 Minutes, we’ve got the highlights, some discussion, and questions about the bigger picture.
Then it’s a celebrity high-note, and a packed Overtime.

Mar 27, 2018 • 0sec
Debian on the Fly | LUP 242
A new version of Slax is out this week, and they might just be onto something really unique. We take this Debian powered, Fluxbox running, net bootin distro for a test drive.
Plus Google moves to block GApps on “uncertified devices”, Red Hat turns 25, a new Wayland contender, a few app picks, and much more.

Mar 27, 2018 • 0sec
Tech That Kills You | Ask Noah 56
Tech literally has a body count! As we tell you what happened and how we dive into the potentially deadly implications of automation. Have you ever wanted to manage digital signage, using linux, and on a budget? We have the solution for you. Your calls go to the front of the line as always! We wrap by spilling our plans for next week's meetup for our 1 year anniversary.
-- The Cliff Notes --
First Fatal Crash with Uber Self Driving Car
Telegram Loses Bid To Stop Russia From Getting Encryption Keys
Foxcons Guys Belkin, Linksys, Wemo
See How the Ask Noah Show Got Started (video)
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Mar 25, 2018 • 0sec
Season of Change | T3 270
The push for encryption backdoors is back on, why Valve has 1,700 CPU's working non-stop, and the big Netflix move Apple is about to pull.
Then we'll cover a study that shows just one percent of Reddit users causes 75 percent of the drama, follow up on some topics, and discuss our thoughts for Season 2.
We set off to SCaLE this year with a goal in mind, but quickly realized the trip and this season of Tech Talk Today, we're going to be about something entirely different.

Mar 24, 2018 • 0sec
Linux Action News 46
webOS is back, and the Linux Foundation has a Hypervisor for your car. Plus some of GNOME's performance issues, Firefox changes, and the hidden files in Bitcoin's blockchain.

Mar 22, 2018 • 0sec
The Slice Age | T3 269
Facebook gets punched in the face all week long, Amazon has drones that can smell fear, Telegram is ordered to hand over the keys, and some crazy folk want to make ketchup slices.
Plus the huge space station thats falling to earth, we talk a little GDPR, and own up to the big mistake Chris made.

Mar 21, 2018 • 0sec
VLAN-Zezes-ki in Hardware | BSD Now 238
Looking at Lumina Desktop 2.0, 2 months of KPTI development in SmartOS, OpenBSD email service, an interview with Ryan Zezeski, NomadBSD released & John Carmack's programming retreat with OpenBSD.


