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Submission + - Scenarios for how AirTags could be used (or misused) (tidbits.com)

eggboard writes: Apple’s AirTags provide long-lived ubiquitous tracking in a coin-sized device wherever anyone with an iPhone, iPad, or Mac lives, works, walks, or drives by. This can be great to find missing objects and where you parked your car, but are they good for averting theft or recovering stolen items? And they’re rife for abuse.

Comment Re:Don't protect me please. (Score 1) 81

"Freedom can be dangerous, but that's the idea": Sure, but these aren't being sold with anything like the information and insight a normal person with reasonable intelligence would require to make a judgment about the relative degree of risk. They are, by design, dangerous. They are sold sometimes in unusable, potentially dangerous or deadly form (electrocution, for instance).

The "freedom" part here isn't "dangerous things should be banned," but rather, "risks should be fully disclosed and stuff shouldn't be sold without warnings to consumers in a form that appears to be safe from a consumer retailer."

Comment Re:Any useful tool is dangerous. Hedge Trim me bab (Score 1) 81

Yes, the popular model in that price range has numerous design flaws, documented in detail at hobbyists’ sites that, if you read even passingly, should make you not think, "I can make this safe," but, "I need to bury this 10 feet deep in sand far away from my house and loved ones."

Submission + - Mystery solved on why your iPhone makes you enter a passcode in the morning (macworld.com)

eggboard writes: Apple added a new Touch ID timeout rule in iOS 9, but only documented it a few days ago. This explains the mystery that I and other people had as to why every few days, we'd be prompted (typically in the morning) to enter our passcode or passphrase when we knew the iOS device hadn't restarted. This timeout rule requires that if you haven't entered your passcode to unlock an iOS device in six days, that you must use Touch ID within eight hours, and then within every eight hours after that. Whenever you miss an eight-hour period (by, say, sleeping), you're prompted for the passcode.

Submission + - Apple's Night Shift may have zero effect on sleep (macworld.com)

eggboard writes: While blue light emitted by monitors and mobile displays has been widely cited as a cause in disrupting people's circadian rhythm, the evidence is thin: a narrow range of blue spectra might not be the problem (it may be a more complicated interaction), brightness may be more important, and Night Shift's (and f.lux's) effects are probably too negligible anyway.

Comment Re:Wonderful... (Score 1) 64

From some reports, Apple has always had this capability and selectively used it. The Recovery Key was something you could do on your own, but you could potentially also convince an Apple tech to escalate it and go through an identity-proving process.

What's clear is that people routinely lost or didn't write down their Recovery Key, and one has to intuit it was an ongoing problem and stress for users who enabled "two-step." In this new version, Apple ostensibly could be social engineered, but note that Apple will only engage in account recovery *to a registered phone number*. So you can't call at random, get a random CS person, and do it. You have to apply, they call back (from a team dedicated to it) and only to a number that's registered to the Apple ID account in question.

Submission + - Apple drops Recovery Key from two-factor auth in new OS versions (macworld.com)

eggboard writes: If you've ever turned on what's now called "two-step verification" for an Apple ID, you had to create a Recovery Key. Lose this 14-digit code and have your password reset (because of hacking attempts against you), and you might lose access forever to purchases and data, as Owen Williams almost did. Apple confirmed today that starting with its public betas of OS X 10.11 and iOS 9, two-factor authentication won't have a Recovery Key. Instead, if you have to reset a password or lose access to devices, you'll have to go through an account verification process with human beings.

Submission + - Minecraft Play Videos Sweep in Cash (the-magazine.org)

eggboard writes: Minecraft YouTube videos are fantastically popular, and a core group of producers of these videos have enjoyed a wild ride up the virtual charts. Diamond Minecart, a YouTube channel by 22-year-old Daniel Middleton of Northamptonshire, England, has almost 1.9 million subscribers, and people have watched his videos over 400 million times.

Joseph Garrett of Portsmouth, England, records himself as "Stampy," and has passed 2 million subscribers and 708 million views. The Daily Mail estimates that his channel currently grosses anywhere from $88,000 to $880,000 a month. A less-watched channel with 140,000 subscribers brings in $5,000 to $10,000 a month.

What's the appeal in watching someone play Minecraft? They are a way for kids to learn not only how to play the game but also how to modify it in almost endless combinations. It also brings them into a community of Minecraft players and turns something that can be an individual activity into something social.

Submission + - The hacker-activist community leaves no safe place for women. Can it grow up? (medium.com)

eggboard writes: Rosie J. Spinks writes about the experience of women in the hacking and hacking/activism communities, where harassment, intimidation, sexualization, and patronization try to relegate them to the sidelines. Some just up and leave.

She writes: "Nowhere is evidence of this anti-female ethos easier to find than in the Internet’s most high-profile and highly organized subverters: the hacktivist group Anonymous. Anonymous’s roots lie in the profane message board known as 4chan, where jokes about rape, porn, and homosexuality are for nothing other than the “Lulz,” or gratuitous laughs. When 4chan factions morphed into Anonymous, the entity gradually gained a political activist-minded consciousness.

"Anonymous has always been a shifting entity, defined by whoever decides to participate on any given day, making proper accountability nearly impossible. Using devious tactics and a middle-school sense of humor (such as sending hundreds of unpaid-for pizzas to a target’s address), the amorphous group carries out a diverse range of well-publicized actions (or “AnonOps”), such as targeting the Church of Scientology’s Dianetics hotline or impinging on the operations of PayPal after it suspended payments to Internet messiah Julian Assange’s Wikileaks."

Submission + - CoderDojo clubs help kids teach themselves to program (medium.com)

eggboard writes: An Irish programmer started with a club in Cork to teach (at no cost) kids aged 5 to 17 how to program. It was such a hit that it's expanded to hundred of cities across 27 countries. CoderDojo has a template that includes self-directed learning with mentors on tap to help out. The notion is to provide kids a productive outlet. Among its successes is an average participation split about halfway between girls and boys in most chapters.

Submission + - The diaries of an early 20th-century "radium hound" reveal dangers that lurk (medium.com)

eggboard writes: A responsible dealer of the radioactive element radium, a substance once pushed widely as a quack cure, tried to keep the genie in the bottle. Theresa Everline explains that in the first half of the 20th century, Frank Hartman, known as the Radium Hound, kept track of accidents and incompetence in handling radium. His diaries reveal that radium lingers in forgotten places.

Submission + - Eggs terminate! Egg-free flu vaccines provide faster pandemic response (medium.com)

eggboard writes: Jen A. Miller has an egg allergy of a variety that her doctor has told her could produce a severe reaction if she were vaccinated for the flu, as flu vaccines are grown from viral strains incubated in chicken eggs. But, she explains, two new approaches have been approved by the FDA and are in production that don't use eggs at all; they're on the market in small amounts already, but will be available in much larger quantities soon. It's not just about egg allergies: the new vaccine types (one relying in insect proteins and the other on animal proteins) provide a much faster turnaround time in response to flu pandemics — as little as two to three months from isolation of a strain to mass production instead of at least six months with eggs.

Comment Re:tl;dr - it's just like a business (Score 3, Informative) 128

I spent many hours and many emails with a good accountant, and he advised me not to launch a Kickstarter late in the year! However, there was no better time, and I had to work around the cash-flow issue, as I describe.

The state taxation issue was my fault. I had, in fact, budgeted to spend *more* on tax than I actually owed. So I wouldn't have come up short. Based on my communication with the state, I expect that I would pay different rates on parts of the Kickstarter, and potentially pay up to about 5% to the state in tax. In the actual event, it was about 1.5%.

However, I should have better understand the issue of destination addresses so that I had properly collected that information from everyone. That's something that I've now heard from many other crowdfunding projects about, too.

Further, at least Washington State requires you pay in-state retail business and occupation tax plus sales tax on all sales for which you cannot account for the destination. That can be a huge tax bill.

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