Miscellaneous Tech News
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@Dashrender said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@JaredBusch said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@mlnews said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Now updated for KB4524147 (OS Build 18362.388), released Oct. 3, 2019.**
This damned thing broke printing for a user today. The Print Spooler service would not stay running. Removed update, service stays running.
great!... NOT
Other users had the update applied and rebooted with no issues.
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BBC News - Libra: PayPal first to drop out of Facebook cryptocurrency
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-australia-49944421 -
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@scottalanmiller said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@black3dynamite said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
https://www.zdnet.com/article/hp-to-axe-up-to-9000-staff-globally-as-part-of-company-restructure/
Ouch
The company said the restructuring plans will see its operating model be simplified so it can become a "more digitally enabled company".
What exactly does that mean?
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@black3dynamite said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@scottalanmiller said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@black3dynamite said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
https://www.zdnet.com/article/hp-to-axe-up-to-9000-staff-globally-as-part-of-company-restructure/
Ouch
The company said the restructuring plans will see its operating model be simplified so it can become a "more digitally enabled company".
What exactly does that mean?
Moving away from printers? lol
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Fewer fax machines?
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Microsoft says Iranian hackers tried to hack a US presidential campaign
Over a recent 30-day stretch, Iran-sponsored hackers attacked 241 accounts in all.
Hackers backed by the Iranian government recently tried to hack email accounts used by the campaign of a US presidential candidate, a Microsoft official said on Friday. The “Phosphorous” hackers, as Microsoft has named the group, targeted the unidentified campaign by attempting to access email accounts campaign staff received through Microsoft cloud services. Rather than relying on malware or exploiting software vulnerabilities, the attackers worked relentlessly to gather information that could be used to activate password resets and other account recovery services Microsoft provides. -
@JaredBusch said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@Dashrender said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@JaredBusch said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@mlnews said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Now updated for KB4524147 (OS Build 18362.388), released Oct. 3, 2019.**
This damned thing broke printing for a user today. The Print Spooler service would not stay running. Removed update, service stays running.
great!... NOT
Other users had the update applied and rebooted with no issues.
Dealing with this update this morning. Two issues.
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Print Spooler blowing up - Remove update and reboot. All is fine. Event log is pointing to issues with jscript.dll
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RDP issue - Internal RDP servers are fine. RDP to external server, connection disappears after 12 seconds. Removed update, reboot and all is fine.
Trying to find a solution....
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@JaredBusch said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@pmoncho said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Trying to find a solution....
You did. remove update.
Yeah. I am realizing that. UGH.
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@JaredBusch said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@pmoncho said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Trying to find a solution....
You did. remove update.
LOL
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Microsoft using Google's Android software is bigger than its Surface Duo phone
Microsoft's Surface reputation and the adoption of a once-rival platform gets the software titan back into the mobile game.
When Microsoft announced its return to making its own smartphones last week, offering its first take on the gadgets since its $7 billion purchase of Nokia went up in smoke four years ago, the software giant said a lot of the things you'd expect. It talked about how its new Surface Duo, sporting two 5.6-inch screens and coming next year, will make us more productive. The device, it said, will more effortlessly blend the computer and phone worlds. "We think of these not just as products, but the beginning of a new category, dual-screen computing," Yusuf Mehdi, corporate vice president for Microsoft's modern life, search and devices group, said in an interview. "We're in the beginning of a new wave of innovation." -
@mlnews said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
We think of these not just as products, but the beginning of a new category, dual-screen computing,"
He says to millions of readers, reading this on dual screens.
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Your VPN won't save you from these 3 things
Your VPN would do anything to cover your tracks. But it won't do that.
Virtual Private Networks are great for a lot of things: protecting your passwords when you hop on public Wi-Fi, accessing your favorite Netflix shows when you travel out of the country, and aiding and abetting you in the criminal act of reading Wikipedia where it's been outlawed. But in the midst of growing VPN hype and a booming market, it's important to understand how VPNs work, and examine vendors with some skepticism, keeping in mind a few things VPNs can't do. -
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Forum cracks the vintage passwords of Ken Thompson and other Unix pioneers
Security in the early days of Unix was poor. Then, there were the passwords.
As one of the original versions of Unix, BSD is an ancient operating system. So it shouldn’t come as a surprise that it used what are, by today’s standards, strange, even ridiculous security. For one, the hashing function protecting passwords, though state of the art 40 years ago, is now trivial to crack. Stranger still, the password hashes of some BSD creators were included in publicly available source code. And then, there are the passwords people chose. Last week, technologist Leah Neukirchen reported finding a source tree for BSD version 3, circa 1980, and successfully cracking passwords of many of computing’s early pioneers. In most of the cases the success was the result of the users choosing easy-to-guess passwords. -
A detailed look at Ubuntu’s new experimental ZFS installer
Let's take a sneak ZFS peek under the hood of Ubuntu Eoan Ermine's latest build.
If you're new to the ZFS hype train, you might wonder why a new filesystem option in an OS installer is a big deal. So here's a quick explanation: ZFS is a copy-on-write filesystem, which can take atomic snapshots of entire filesystems. This looks like sheer magic if you're not used to it—a snapshot of a 10TB filesystem can be taken instantly without interrupting any system process in the slightest. Once the snapshot is taken, it's an immutable record of the exact, block-for-block condition of the filesystem at the moment in time the snapshot was taken. When a snapshot is first taken, it consumes no additional disk space. As time goes by and changes are made to the filesystem, the space required to keep the snapshot grows by the amount of data that has been deleted or altered. So let's say you snapshot a 10TB filesystem: the snapshot completes instantly, requiring no additional room. Then you delete a 5MB JPEG file—now the snapshot consumes 5MB of disk space, because it still has the JPEG you deleted. Then you change 5MB of data in a database, and the snapshot takes 10MB—5MB for the JPEG you deleted and another 5MB for the data that you altered in the database. -
Planting tiny spy chips in hardware can cost as little as $200
Proof-of-concept shows how easy it may be to hide malicious chips inside IT equipment.
More than a year has passed since Bloomberg Businessweek grabbed the lapels of the cybersecurity world with a bombshell claim: that Supermicro motherboards in servers used by major tech firms, including Apple and Amazon, had been stealthily implanted with a chip the size of a rice grain that allowed Chinese hackers to spy deep into those networks. Apple, Amazon, and Supermicro all vehemently denied the report. The National Security Agency dismissed it as a false alarm. The Defcon hacker conference awarded it two Pwnie Awards, for "most overhyped bug" and "most epic fail." And no follow-up reporting has yet affirmed its central premise. But even as the facts of that story remain unconfirmed, the security community has warned that the possibility of the supply chain attacks it describes is all too real. The NSA, after all, has been doing something like it for years, according to the leaks of whistle-blower Edward Snowden. Now researchers have gone further, showing just how easily and cheaply a tiny, tough-to-detect spy chip could be planted in a company's hardware supply chain. And one of them has demonstrated that it doesn't even require a state-sponsored spy agency to pull it off—just a motivated hardware hacker with the right access and as little as $200 worth of equipment.