my cat will sometimes put his paws on the left-shit, left-control, caps lock, tab, and the other buttons on that side.
and sometimes when I’m up late at night, I don’t realize that I was typing in caps
my cat will sometimes put his paws on the left-shit, left-control, caps lock, tab, and the other buttons on that side.
and sometimes when I’m up late at night, I don’t realize that I was typing in caps
most password managers give you the option to export your saved credentials. Pick a format that proton pass can read and then import it into proton pass.
a lot of people called me crazy for saying that.
google does it too.
apple definitely does it too.
they’re going to blame it on either, Iran, Russia, China or…Venezuela…or whatever other country to manufacture consent for another war
you might’ve been able to avoid this by choosing a different folder for it to sync to on your re-install
answering the question in the title…no. Not to the service you’re using it to sign up for anyway
But someone monitoring the emails going from one address to another? Probably yes.
So I guess use a VPN that either doesn’t have IPv6 or disable IPv6 in any VPN you have that has that feature
Good…now do that to all the other car companies, audit the fuck out of all them.
yes, but not in a digital form like the kinds of subscription services that make it nearly impossible to cancel.
The elderly members of congress won’t know how to help the situation, so it’s overwhelmingly likely that whatever they end up voting on will either be written by people who don’t understand how that stuff works, or, more likely the bill(s) written will be written by lobbying groups
yeah…all the elderly old farts in our government are totally going to put something together that will NOT make problems like that worse.
I started using Aegis as soon as I saw the update for the google authenticator that “securely stores” my authentication tokens…in google’s own severs…that get hacked all the time.
Don’t use proton pass to store your 2FA tokens, use something like Aegis for 2FA tokens instead, and be sure to password protect it with a password that you DON’T store inside of proton pass
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This article might be propaganda.
Oh wait…I see the writer of the article showed MSNBC as one of his or her sources, so it’s definitely some kind of propaganda to push more Russia hysteria and to manufacture consent for stealing all of Venezuela’s oil.
I don’t, but many people do use their faces to unlock things
“give us the key you use to get into many of your devices and we’ll let you use our service!”
this is why you need to be running that shit exclusively on your own hardware, don’t allow a third party service to manage that shit for you. It’s not that hard to figure out on your own.
I honestly can’t think of any other way to force shitty antivirus programs to improve. Every boomer I know uses Norton or McAfee and refuses to even hear about other options.
Kaspersky is pretty good at protecting the average user from scammers, because they blacklisted remote desktop programs in their malware database, and now that’s being banned within the US.
The US government’s definition of “compliant” when it comes to something like that will completely cancel out anything good that comes from using Kaspersky, so it’s never going to be un-banned and also be worth using
or! or!..Maybe put more restrictions on which antivirus programs will be able to register with the security center?
Like…if they have a long history of fucking up, they get theirs revoked, if they have a history of quality control failures…like crowdstrike does, they get revoked.
If they want to be able to register with the security center, they need to be audited by several different cybersecurity analysis teams that are all completely independent from each other, preferably from different countries with strong data privacy laws to prove that they’re actually worth using.
For norton and mcAfee and now crowdstrike and a few others that suck, that means they’re going to have to improve massively before anyone will be able to use them…for others like comodo, secureage and other whitelisting applications on par with those two, that means much more business for them.
Like it or not, the majority of the world’s computers, including those of which for critical infrastructure around the world run on windows. If you’re an antivirus company, trusted enough to be able to register with the security center, you better be ready to prove that you’re not going to be worse than using microsoft APT or MS defender with configure defender on MAX…that’s an easy bar to overcome, but many antivirus programs, like norton and McAfee and even Avast/AVG now and Avira…I think Avira is now owned by norton lifelock… insist on limboing under that bar.
If you’re expecting your product to be trusted, it better be fucking trustworthy. Making an antivirus program that works and works well can literally be the difference between people living and dying. Imagine how many life-saving surgeries had to be postponed because of crowdstrike’s lack of QC. imagine how many transplant organ shipments had to be postponed because of this fuckup.
And of course, scammers capitalized on the confusion, put malware links that promised to fix machines destroyed by crowdstike only to install zero-day malware instead…data-stealers, very quiet forms of malware that the vast majority of antivirus products are useless against.
TLDR…GET YOUR SHIT TOGETHER, people depend on their computers for all kinds of things now.
maybe it should be prohibited for big companies to keep certain kinds of information about people?
Anything that could possibly be used to dox someone needs to be deleted after refund policies expire.