Miscellaneous Tech News
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@mlnews said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
SpaceX gets almost $900 million in federal subsidies to deliver broadband to rural America
The US government plans to give SpaceX nearly a billion dollars to beam internet from space to people across rural America, where three out of five people say access to broadband is still a pressing issue.
The company will receive a total of $856 million, one of the largest subsidies handed out by the Federal Communications Commission under a new program designed to encourage companies to extend broadband access into the United States' most underserved areas over the next 10 years. SpaceX's win is notable because the company competed against more established internet service providers, such as Charter Communications and CenturyLink, which rely on traditional fiber optic cables to deliver high-speed internet to customers. SpaceX's Starlink internet service, which is currently in beta testing and is not yet fully operational, relies on an experimental swarm of nearly 1,000 satellites whizzing around Earth at more than 17,000 miles per hour as they beam the internet to high-tech antennas mounted on people's homes.Hey SpaceX.... Can you please define my neighborhood as rural so we can have a better choice for internet service?
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@RojoLoco said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@mlnews said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
SpaceX gets almost $900 million in federal subsidies to deliver broadband to rural America
The US government plans to give SpaceX nearly a billion dollars to beam internet from space to people across rural America, where three out of five people say access to broadband is still a pressing issue.
The company will receive a total of $856 million, one of the largest subsidies handed out by the Federal Communications Commission under a new program designed to encourage companies to extend broadband access into the United States' most underserved areas over the next 10 years. SpaceX's win is notable because the company competed against more established internet service providers, such as Charter Communications and CenturyLink, which rely on traditional fiber optic cables to deliver high-speed internet to customers. SpaceX's Starlink internet service, which is currently in beta testing and is not yet fully operational, relies on an experimental swarm of nearly 1,000 satellites whizzing around Earth at more than 17,000 miles per hour as they beam the internet to high-tech antennas mounted on people's homes.Hey SpaceX.... Can you please define my neighborhood as rural so we can have a better choice for internet service?
Your have Nazicast (ComCast) for your 1 choice of an ISP?
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@JaredBusch said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@Pete-S said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
OK, so you get privacy by sending ALL your DNS requests directly to Cloudflare.
It was clearly noted that the proxy and the resolver should be separate entities.
Are you naive or what?
It's obvious that Oblivious DNS over HTTPS only works if the resolver (aka target server) and the proxy doesn't collude.
So you need to trust that they don't.
That's not privacy. -
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Co-op facial recognition trial raises privacy concerns
A trial of facial recognition technology within 18 Co-op food stores has sparked outrage from privacy advocates.
The system, from start-up Facewatch, alerts workers if someone enters the store who had a past record of "theft or anti-social behaviour". The supermarket said the pilot was done to protect workers from assaults by shoplifters. Privacy groups say they are "deeply concerned" by the trial. The initiative was organised by the Southern Co-operative, which is independent of the larger Co-op chain but runs more than 200 stores in the south of England using the same brand. The trial was first reported by Wired's news site, which picked up on a blog posted on Facewatch's website by Southern Co-op's loss prevention officer Gareth Lewis. -
Tech Tent: Breaking up Facebook
In a landmark lawsuit, US regulators have accused Facebook of buying up rivals in order to stifle competition.
They have made it clear they will seek a drastic remedy - the sale of Instagram and WhatsApp. On this week's Tech Tent we ask whether it is really likely that the social media giant's empire will be dismantled. New York Attorney General Letitia James could hardly have been clearer in her denunciation as she outlined the case she and more than 45 other state and federal regulators are bringing against Facebook. "For nearly a decade, Facebook has used its dominance and monopoly power to crush smaller rivals, and snuff out competition, all at the expense of everyday users," she said. -
Neverware is now part of Google
https://cloudreadykb.neverware.com/s/article/Neverware-is-now-part-of-Google-FAQ
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@warren-stanley well that sucks. I see another CentOS disaster heading our way.
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SolarWinds: Why the Sunburst hack is so serious
We've all seen the pop-ups on our laptops or phones: "Update is available, click here to download."
We're constantly urged to do as we're told because these software updates improve our apps by boosting cyber-security and removing glitches. So when, in the spring, a pop-up message hit the screens of IT staff using a popular piece of software called SolarWinds, around 18,000 workers in companies and governments diligently downloaded the update for their offices. What they couldn't have known was that the download was booby-trapped. SolarWinds itself didn't know either. The US company had been the victim of a cyber-attack weeks previously that had seen hackers inject a tiny piece of secret code into the company's next software update. -
@scottalanmiller Definitely. This is / was pretty nice. I guess there's more *nix installs in my future....
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Facebook pours fuel on Apple privacy row
Facebook has launched a public offensive against Apple, dragging a long-simmering row between the two tech giants into the public sphere.
Earlier this year, Apple announced it planned to ask users if they want their data to be shared for targeted, personalised advertising. The move is likely to hurt Facebook, which has warned it could cut the money earned through its ad network by half. But Facebook is portraying itself as "speaking up for small businesses". A blog post from Dan Levy, vice-president of ads, suggested that Facebook needs it to be possible to track users' activities across other apps and websites, in order to help its advertisers target their posts at those people who would most likely be responsive. -
@scottalanmiller yep just found this out was piloting it on some of our oldie but goodie Latitude's that never die
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A new hyperconverged software platform has come to the ranks to give Nutanix and vSphere a run for it's money, Rancher Harvester - Github Page is completely open source, and comes with an optional support.
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@DustinB3403 said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
A new hyperconverged software platform has come to the ranks to give Nutanix and vSphere a run for it's money, Rancher Harvester - Github Page is completely open source, and comes with an optional support.
Saw this yesterday.
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Red Hat’s crime against CentOS
In the beginning, no one expected to get Red Hat Enterprise Linux for free. The end of CentOS as a free drop-in replacement is no cause for outrage.
In tech, we tend to get angriest when companies take free things away from us. For example, we shake our fist at Google for removing services they once offered for free. And in open source land, we cry out for justice when our free, drop-in replacement for Red Hat Enterprise Linux (namely CentOS) becomes less useful as a way to avoid paying for RHEL.
I don’t know why Red Hat chose to pull the plug on the traditional fixed-point CentOS release, leaving only the CentOS Stream rolling release in its wake. Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols walks through a few possible reasons, and Red Hat CTO Chris Wright gives the company’s rationale. But many CentOS users are furious (just ask Hacker News).
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@JaredBusch said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Red Hat’s crime against CentOS
In the beginning, no one expected to get Red Hat Enterprise Linux for free. The end of CentOS as a free drop-in replacement is no cause for outrage.
In tech, we tend to get angriest when companies take free things away from us. For example, we shake our fist at Google for removing services they once offered for free. And in open source land, we cry out for justice when our free, drop-in replacement for Red Hat Enterprise Linux (namely CentOS) becomes less useful as a way to avoid paying for RHEL.
I don’t know why Red Hat chose to pull the plug on the traditional fixed-point CentOS release, leaving only the CentOS Stream rolling release in its wake. Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols walks through a few possible reasons, and Red Hat CTO Chris Wright gives the company’s rationale. But many CentOS users are furious (just ask Hacker News).
Because if your software company still hasn't adopted Agile framework and DevOps practices, it's time to start. Hopefully this is the start of shitty software / SW companies either disappearing or getting better. Having to rely on a stale OS version isn't good for anyone.
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@scottalanmiller said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
I wonder what kind of blow back this will have.
At least they didn’t try to cover it up.
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