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Comment Re:Spreading misinformation (Score -1, Offtopic) 36

Removing misinformation is not illegal either. It's common sense.

Who decides it's misinformation?

Quite a few times things which were deemed misinformation back during the COVID times turned out to be different than official sources said (at first or later).

When such heavy hands occur, especially when the government is pushing it, it makes the act seem extra suspicious, or so I've heard for the last week along cries of fascism.

Comment Re:Why stay in Seattle? (Score 3, Insightful) 52

Remote work has not continued the way many had hoped. Too many companies, Microsoft included have largely decreed that if you want to keep your job, you're going to have to live/work in one of their hubs, or be very lucky. As a result, not only are many stuck there, but many medium and small companies have done the same. Yes, remote jobs exist, they are just few and far between and much harder to get than even a couple of years ago.

Comment Re:How would you exfiltrate data? (Score 1) 39

EDR is sometimes all you have to know something happened. Waiting for DLP to note a loss can be too late if there is behavior which isn't currently being flagged as suspect. I've seen cases where employees attempted to establish a new baseline of behavior which EDR caught before they got around to leaking things and were told by management how they should be doing backups of their work machine and to stop the ways they were trying. If it happens again, then you have stronger reason to think they are up to no good and need stronger re-training or axing.

Comment Re:How would you exfiltrate data? (Score 1) 39

Macs have indeed changed, it was certainly doable on Intel units, though some options could be turned off from afar to make it harder. With Apple Silicon + FileVault + disabled external boot, it's pretty much impossible unless you've an insider who knows the needed keys, which should be safeguarded well away from easy single person access.

Comment Re:How would you exfiltrate data? (Score 3, Interesting) 39

Eventually your device will go back online and whatever EDR or DLP your company has installed will send the offline logs to a server, same logs which are generated when online. How big do you think the ring buffer is for those logs?

You might have gotten away with it in past, it suggests your employer was utterly incompetent if they didn't notice activity like this.

Comment Re:"Edge of Space" (Score 4, Insightful) 74

You're asking the wrong question, you should be asking things more along the lines of:

"When is BO going to send humans to space for more than a few minutes?"
"When is blue origin going to send humans to orbit?"
"When is blue origin going to rendezvous and dock with a space station or other craft?"

For now, they've got an expensive carnival ride.

Comment Re:What is the purpose of Government? (Score 4, Insightful) 249

And... who's going to verify/certify/ensure that those appliances are actually as energy efficient as claimed?

Consumer Reports?

Who says they are the only candidate? The government has the NHTSA, while the private sector has the more rigorous IIHS. UL has done this kind

Speaking of UL... you realize that they are one of those who does the testing under the EngeryStar program, right? ex: https://www.ul.com/services/en...

If the program goes away tomorrow, no doubt they'd simply close their doors and never test energy efficiency again.

Comment Re:stolen phones (Score 2) 20

That's what I logged in to ask... what's the point of a scheme like this when blocking exists?

A couple of years ago I ordered a iPhone & case from T-Mobile, and one day a signature required box showed up with just the case in site. Upon investigation by T-Mobile & FedEx, it was found the box was light from the original warehouse, so someone must have screwed up and not put the phone in the box... but had scanned it as linked to my account. Fast forward a couple of weeks and I get an email noting that the IMEI of that phone had been permanently blocked and would not be activatable.

Sure, maybe some random carrier in far away country doesn't check those lists... but wouldn't Apple also block such a device?

Comment Re:Irrelevant (Score 1) 199

Unless the something they decide to do is ban all guns, they won't do anything even remotely useful.

And if they did ban all guns... then what? Even if all police and military firearms were included in the ban... do we really think all guns everywhere in the United States would suddenly disappear? If successful at legislating a ban, and collecting all of the firearms which exist today... as seen here and plenty elsewhere, manufacturing of new ones is trivially easy, rendering the ban largely ineffective.

Comment Re:"Ghost gun" is a propaganda term... (Score 1) 199

It used to be the case that if you wanted to make your own semi-automatic then the receiver would be the hardest part to make

The reason the receivers are traditionally part which makes it legally a 'gun' on it's own is because more of tradition (it's how it's been for a long time) and the fact they usually have a flat surface where a serial number can be added. Yes, plenty of rifles & shotguns have stamped information on the barrel, even sometimes including a serial number, it's more work to do it there.

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