That this is the sole suggested
Dan Lyke /
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That this is the sole suggested reaction pic, that shows up when I think I'm trying to send a photo, says something about Android messages.
(And if I could totally turn off reaction pics, I would, because I do not want to send this message by accident.)
Your regular reminder that businesses
Dan Lyke /
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Your regular reminder that businesses run loyalty programs because they make more money with them, consumers use loyalty programs because they're willing to trade privacy for being made more money from.
A team of scientists at the University of California discovered that there is
a nutrient called quercitin in red wine that actually stops your body from processing
alcohol.
Ben Werdmuller's Friday links
included notes about the New Public Local Lab
announcement of their community engagement platform Roundabout. In the sign-up form they ask you to
write a bit about how and why you'd like to bring their platform into your community, and
I wrote the following:
I have been chronically online since the '80s, started an ISP in the '90s to expand my
online community and cross that with my in-person community, and sociology grad students
call me up to chat about being one of the early bloggers (still am). Over the years I've
participated in various community email lists.
I accidentally helped found Petaluma Urban Chat (urbanchat.org), a 501c3 which works to
educate and advocate on housing to meet community needs, alternatives to car mobility,
sustainable municipal finance, all in the face of needing to adapt to climate change.
I'm even a Nextdoor lead, though I mostly ignore those duties, because...
I *hate* that I'm enriching Nextdoor through trying to bring some sanity to their horrific
engagement bait. My reasonable neighbors have fled their platform.
I used to believe that online created fantastic communities, which is why I worked to
bring the physical world online, but discovered that mostly I just was one of many people
whose work destroyed those online communities.
So these days in my spare time (yes, I'm employed) working on building real-world physical
communities, but I see a need for better communication, for better neighborhood level
organizing, and, despite all of the evidence and experience to the contrary still believe
that it may be possible to use online tools to do such things.
And the few Signal groups that are forming up don't seem up to the task.
I am getting more and more pissed off
Dan Lyke /
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I am getting more and more pissed off at Apple: Wi-Fi settings "Copy Password" does not appear to be working, and I can't find another way to see it.
Masonry: Things You Wont Need A Library For Anymore is an article on the
excesses of CSS, or a good rundown of all of the things you don't need JavaScript or other
hacks (wacky-ass background images) for, or that can now be laid out more cleanly in CSS
and HTML.
Its time to talk about my cat. To which you might be saying, Chuck, I didnt
know you had a cat! and Id respond with, I didnt know I had a cat either. But Google
the preeminent search engine! knows otherwise, courtesy of its wonderful, never-ever-
inaccurate AI Overview, which is totally not a piece of shit that just makes up
information willy-fucking-nilly.
Speaking of data collection, a detail I always look for in projects like this
is the data: where does it come from? Who benefits from it? Who decides how it's used? I
can't find specific info on their methods, but I think their stated principles are spot-on:
"We will never own recordings, we will never publish them, we will never profit
off of them. It will always be up to the discretion of the communities we work with and we
always defer to them."
Reverse engineering Linux malware
Dan Lyke /
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LinkPro targets GNU/Linux systems and is developed in Golang.
The Synacktiv CSIRT names it LinkPro in reference to the symbol defining
its main module: github.com/link-pro/link-client. The GitHub
account link-pro has no public
repositories or contributions. LinkPro uses eBPF technology to only
activate upon receiving a "magic packet", and to conceal itself on the compromised system.
(eBPF is the "extended Berkeley Packet Filter")
Teaching Calculus through Nonstandard Analysis
Dan Lyke /
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This is fascinating to me because the calculus (and, indeed, the linear algebra) I was
taught was so much drudgery and remembering rules, and it took other means to build a
better intuitive feel for what was actually happening.
Found this article thanks to a Reddit comment. Every day or so there's someone
asking in math reddits what "dy/dx" means or why there's a "dx" in the integral notation,
and then an army of people come out of the woodwork to push the orthodoxy of limits like
some stockholm syndrome prisoners... And a small number of people point out that
nonstandard analysis is actually a real thing and works... Anyway, back before I was born
Sullivan did an actual experiment on teaching
lyra's epic blog: SVG Filters -
Clickjacking 2.0. In which someone sets out to recreate Apple's "Liquid Glass"
interface for the web, and ends up discovering a whole new class of iframe exploits.
On February 18, 2025, at approximately 4:58 p.m.,
MUNEEB AKHTER issued commands that deleted a DHS production database
containing U.S. government information. The database was hosted on a Company-1 server in
the Eastern District of Virginia.
On February 18, 2025, at approximately 4:59 p.m., MUNEEB AKHTER
asked an artificial intelligence tool, how do i clear system logs from SQL servers after
deleting databases.
On February 18, 2025, at approximately 5:14 p.m., SOHAIB AKHTER
stated aloud, Theyre gonna probably raid this place, to which MUNEEB
AKHTER replied, I'll clean this shit up. SOHAIB AKHTER
responded, We also gotta clean stuff up from the other house, man.