[-] drspod@lemmy.ml 18 points 1 week ago

There's something important missing from this article:

Eventually, that same USB drive is inserted into an air-gapped computer, allowing GoldenDealer to install GoldenHowl (a backdoor) and GoldenRobo (a file stealer) onto these isolated systems.

Why is an airgapped machine running executable code from a USB drive? Is there some OS-level vulnerability being exploited?

The original writeup says the following:

It is probable that this unknown component finds the last modified directory on the USB drive, hides it, and renames itself with the name of this directory, which is done by JackalWorm. We also believe that the component uses a folder icon, to entice the user to run it when the USB drive is inserted in an air-gapped system

So we have airgapped machines that rely on users to click icons in a graphical file manager to move data from USB drives. This is a complete failure of security procedure. If you have systems that need to be airgapped then you also need the corresponding procedures for use of those systems to prevent this kind of compromise.

[-] drspod@lemmy.ml 16 points 2 weeks ago

From what I've read, that person is not officially affiliated with the Godot project. They just moderate an unofficial Discord server that is Godot-related.

[-] drspod@lemmy.ml 18 points 3 weeks ago

Reuters just regurgitating investor-bait because they have no domain expertise. Maybe Reuters journalists should be getting some training from experts too.

[-] drspod@lemmy.ml 16 points 4 weeks ago

Sorry, there’s no way Qualcomm is buying Intel as is

At the end of its third quarter of its fiscal 2024, [...] Qualcomm had $7.8 billion in cash and [...] just over $23 billion in total assets. That means Qualcomm, [...] is almost certainly looking at a stock-for-stock transaction. As of writing, Qualcomm's market cap is $188 billion, just more than double that of Intel's at $93 billion.

In fact, Chipzilla may not be worth much to Qualcomm unless it can renegotiate the x86/x86-64 cross-licensing patent agreement between Intel and AMD, which dates back to 2009. That agreement is terminated if a change in control happens at either Intel or AMD.

While a number of the patents expired in 2021, it's our understanding that agreement is still in force and Qualcomm would be subject to change of control rules. In other words, Qualcomm wouldn't be able to produce Intel-designed x86-64 chips unless AMD gave the green light.

[-] drspod@lemmy.ml 16 points 1 month ago

Thanks! I was racking my brain trying to think of where I knew it from, and after seeing the page that you linked I'm almost certain that it's After Burner that is causing my brain to trigger the 80s association.

[-] drspod@lemmy.ml 17 points 1 month ago

So that would make it 1.4m in the last two weeks which makes a big difference.

It would have been nice for the article to actually discuss these specifics. I'm not sure what we're supposed to take away from it.

[-] drspod@lemmy.ml 16 points 2 months ago

Wow, Wordle got more difficult since I last played it.

[-] drspod@lemmy.ml 17 points 3 months ago

Explain to me how what you just said is any different from a homophobic person who says "I don't have anything against gay people I just wish they wouldn't rub it in my face" and when seeing a gay couple kissing they say "eww that's gross why do you have to do that in public"?

When someone says that, it's homophobic. What you just said is also phobic. You don't get to dictate how other people express their sexuality just because it doesn't align with your own sexuality. You have to learn to live in a world with other people who are not like you.

Do better.

[-] drspod@lemmy.ml 16 points 1 year ago

and it could abusing the bandwitdh limitations of the source site by using multiple parallel connections that pulled on different file chunks

Also for files which had multiple different mirror sites you could download chunks from multiple mirrors concurrently which would allow you to max out your bandwidth even if individual mirrors were limiting download speeds.

[-] drspod@lemmy.ml 17 points 1 year ago

TLDW: 8 minutes of vacuous navel-gazing which could have been distilled to the following 4 sentences:

But who involves themselves that much with games? Critics, journalists and enthusiasts. But what percentage of the whole do these people make? If you're watching this video right now I imagine you'd be considered an outlying statistic a few steps away from the average demographic the industry continues to target.

[-] drspod@lemmy.ml 18 points 1 year ago

Same. What a disappointment that was. Mobile-style time-gating and microtransactions in a PC game.

[-] drspod@lemmy.ml 16 points 1 year ago

Back in the early 90s someone told me, "source code gets lost, but binaries live forever." It was true back then (because of the way people shared files by trading floppy disks) but I think today in the open source ecosystem, actually the opposite is true.

A project may not get packaged or released anymore, but as long as the source code is still available, new people can make use of that work and make derivative works with their own modifications.

I worry that too much of our collective community work is siloed in places like GitHub that one day may throw out old repositories while spring cleaning. I hope that we see the same level of effort put into source code preservation that organizations like the Internet Archive put into binary preservation.

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drspod

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