Miscellaneous Tech News
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Garmin services and production go down after ransomware attack
https://www.zdnet.com/article/garmin-services-and-production-go-down-after-ransomware-attack/
https://www.forbes.com/sites/leemathews/2020/07/23/garmins-alleged-ransomware-wastedlocker-evil-corp/#14378b9f156d -
Facebook takes the EU to court over privacy spat
Facebook has pushed back against a European Union investigation into its practices, taking it to court over privacy concerns.
Two investigations are being carried out into Facebook to find out if it breaches competition laws. To gather information, the European Commission has demanded internal documents from Facebook that include 2,500 specific key phrases. Facebook says that means handing over unrelated but highly sensitive data. The European Commission says it will defend the case in court, and its investigation into Facebook's potential anticompetitive conduct is ongoing. The social media giant has filed an appeal to the EU courts, arguing against the breadth of the document requests. -
Wiley: Rapper deleted from Facebook after abuse of Jewish critics
Facebook has deleted the personal account of rapper Wiley after he shared abusive posts aimed at his Jewish critics.
His comments came after an anti-Semitic tirade on Twitter on Friday. The BBC found posts on Facebook under his real name Richard Kylea Cowie. He specifically named Jewish celebrities - including Lord Alan Sugar, comedian David Baddiel and BBC presenter Emma Barnett. A Facebook spokesperson said Wiley's account was removed for "repeated violations" of its policies. It initially suspended, then deleted the grime artist's Facebook and Instagram profiles. The BBC has contacted the musician for comment. The posts aimed abuse at Jewish celebrities who had expressed their dismay about Wiley's tweets. Several of his posts mentioned "Golders Green" - a London neighbourhood with a large Jewish community. -
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/dell-emc-patches-idrac/
A vulnerability in the Integrated Dell Remote Access Controller (iDRAC) that could have allowed cyber-criminals to gain full control of server operations has been detected
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Fedora 33 & BTRFS default
Desktop only at this stage(?)
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@warren-stanley said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Fedora 33 & BTRFS default
Desktop only at this stage(?)
Interesting
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@warren-stanley said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Fedora 33 & BTRFS default
Desktop only at this stage(?)
I haven't used BTRFS in a long time... My advise is run... as far and as fast as you can, lol.
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Yeah isn't btrfs a really old filesystem that no one really uses anymore or am I thinking of something else?
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@dafyre said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@warren-stanley said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Fedora 33 & BTRFS default
Desktop only at this stage(?)
I haven't used BTRFS in a long time... My advise is run... as far and as fast as you can, lol.
Well that clearly is not at all accurate if Fedora is working to push it as the default.
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@jmoore said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Yeah isn't btrfs a really old filesystem that no one really uses anymore or am I thinking of something else?
BTRFS has been around for a long time, yes
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Will have to do some reading to see what's changed in last few years. I admit I have not kept up with it.
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@dafyre said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@warren-stanley said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Fedora 33 & BTRFS default
Desktop only at this stage(?)
I haven't used BTRFS in a long time... My advise is run... as far and as fast as you can, lol.
Why, I've had nothing but good luck with it.
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@jmoore said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Yeah isn't btrfs a really old filesystem that no one really uses anymore or am I thinking of something else?
It's the most up to date and modern filesystem with any widespread use. Literally every filesystem you know is much older except for maybe ReFS.
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@DustinB3403 said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@jmoore said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Yeah isn't btrfs a really old filesystem that no one really uses anymore or am I thinking of something else?
BTRFS has been around for a long time, yes
In total years, yes. Compared to any other filesystem, no. I think you guys are thinking of Reiser.
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@jmoore said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Will have to do some reading to see what's changed in last few years. I admit I have not kept up with it.
BtrFS has been the "future" filesystem for Linux for years. But it's not been far enough along for most places to put into production yet. It's just getting to that point, now. That's why it is going to desktops, but not servers, at this point. This is the stage prior to it starting to replace XFS and EXT4 in production servers.
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@scottalanmiller said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@jmoore said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Will have to do some reading to see what's changed in last few years. I admit I have not kept up with it.
BtrFS has been the "future" filesystem for Linux for years. But it's not been far enough along for most places to put into production yet. It's just getting to that point, now. That's why it is going to desktops, but not servers, at this point. This is the stage prior to it starting to replace XFS and EXT4 in production servers.
It's Facebook that have had problems with scaling xfs and invested a lot in btrfs.
As you said, Fedora users are just beta testers for real production use. Consider it production ready when it ends up in RHEL.I read this a couple of weeks ago. Has some more info: https://lwn.net/Articles/824855/
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@scottalanmiller said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@jmoore said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Will have to do some reading to see what's changed in last few years. I admit I have not kept up with it.
BtrFS has been the "future" filesystem for Linux for years. But it's not been far enough along for most places to put into production yet. It's just getting to that point, now. That's why it is going to desktops, but not servers, at this point. This is the stage prior to it starting to replace XFS and EXT4 in production servers.
We had it in production here on several systems. We suffered no end of FS corruption, and snapshots that won't delete for various reasons...systems randomly hanging and going down... We've upgraded all of the systems to newer OSes and use EXT4.
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@dafyre said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@scottalanmiller said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@jmoore said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Will have to do some reading to see what's changed in last few years. I admit I have not kept up with it.
BtrFS has been the "future" filesystem for Linux for years. But it's not been far enough along for most places to put into production yet. It's just getting to that point, now. That's why it is going to desktops, but not servers, at this point. This is the stage prior to it starting to replace XFS and EXT4 in production servers.
We had it in production here on several systems. We suffered no end of FS corruption, and snapshots that won't delete for various reasons...systems randomly hanging and going down... We've upgraded all of the systems to newer OSes and use EXT4.
Why EXT4 and not XFS? XFS is the mature, stable, fast one.
Why were you using BtrFS in production? It's not considered ready even now, let alone anytime in the past. It's hoped to be classified as production in 1-2 years.
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@Pete-S said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
As you said, Fedora users are just beta testers for real production use.
Fedora DESKTOP, not Fedora.
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@Pete-S said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Consider it production ready when it ends up in RHEL.
No, that's when it's old. When it is in Fedora Server is when it's production.