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I wonder if Tim Pool will have to give back his Russian propaganda funded skatepark

This is a sentence I just idly thought, this is a glimpse into madness



Phlogging the paper tape

If you don't know, my SSG supports RSS, Web, and Gopher, all on obscuritus.ca



Thinking about Bandcamp and incentives.

So I just bought music from derinaharveyband.bandcamp.com/… and you should too. You should buy it all and leave a tip. But, let's talk incentives.

So I want to buy Derina's music, because (he way she sings makes me want to scream, weep, join the chorus, and somehow fly. And if she releases a new anything, I want to know one second after, if not early enough I can preorder.

But I don't buy a lot of music, I have extensive ear damage and most music falls flat for me. So I don't care about much other music.

Derina Harvey Band doesn't care what music I buy, as long as I buy theirs (they are probably good people and hope I support their community though, back there in a second).

So Derina Harvey Band and I have a relationship (I want to give them money), but they want to make more, so they use Bandcamp for discoverability. I found their bandcamp before I found their website! So bandcamp is good! It fascilitated a relationship, and I get to hear about the sea.

But now Bandcamp wants to spam me about not-Derina-Harvey, they want me to learn about Nathan Evans or whoever, bands I really don't want to engage with, since I might buy their music. And this has lead me to turn off all communications from Bandcamp. This means I miss when bands I like release music.

So, because there's a broker (platform) who is going to meditate my relationship with Derina Harvey Band, I am going to lose out. Bandcamp turned a new fan into a new customer, but made it harder for a customer to stay a customer.

And, I want to be clear here, there was not even regular Enshittifiation. It's bandcamp Friday, I sent the band slightly over full price for all their albums and they're probably getting, as cash, the full price of all their albums, the platform took nothing. But they band also doesn't have a POSSE style setup, I need to use a platform to learn about tours and releases, and I don't.

I dunno, this is just a tragic story, there's no lesson we don't all know, and there's no solution that isn't to tell a band to manage their own mailing list. The obvious solution is to create a platform that isn't evil, but even then, I don't think that's possible because of all this.

Abolish capitalism so I can revel in a shanty about how capitalism ruins sailing.

in reply to silverwizard

Bandcamp won't let you, but one "Paweł Grzybek" has set this service up based on another. It's limited to 100,000 daily requests, so he requests people don't hammer it too much.

pawelgrzybek.com/generate-rss-…

I guess that means you can't get notified the very second another album comes out, but I bet once per day wouldn't strain Paweł's limits too much.




I made Pumpkin Spice Chocolate Chip cookies with my 3yo - and that was a mistake. Now I just want to eat those all day.


Trying to put my 5yo to bed and he said "Does the solar system that Arda is in have a planet called Middle Mars?"
in reply to doreen violente

@thanos cosmatos Don't worry - we got there. He's being read The Hobbit and he needs pretty deep backstory to stop his intrusive thoughts - but Tolkien has my back.


Zscaler has a hard dependency on systemd on linux

This causes so many issues, any minor change in modules and defaults causes my user's computers to lock up and completely lose internet. A basic local vpn (which is all zscaler is) is trivial to implement without systemd.

By depending on systemd, they are making my life worse as an admin, for no gain.

I don't get the systemd cult.

in reply to silverwizard

it's running as a service or daemon right? So you need a system that controls your daemons....

Like a firewall, or any other service.

How's the tunnel know when to come up if something doesn't tell it?



Does anyone have any experience with syncing a #bandcamp library to a location. I just want to make sure my purchases and my jellyfin library match and automatically download items if they aren't.
in reply to silverwizard

that's the one! I only used it a couple of times, but I was impressed both times.



New funding model for Open Source just dropped.

InfoSec starts screaming about a 9.9 CVSS and then the open source maintainer sells the vuln on the dark web.



The best IMDB pages are these kinds
imdb.com/name/nm0870439/

Just a jobber who has acted in shows I'd love, it's like a To Watch List and a Resume




Ran into family friends from childhood while out last night, and all they could talk about is that my dad had a heart attack a few months ago.

My family is downplaying it so much, and it was the first time I got to talk to someone who took it seriously (except my wife), and it was nice.

in reply to Jonathan Lamothe

@Jonathan Lamothe oh, I don't know if I've mentioned it that much online. And you're mostly an online friend these days. He's doing better, just one of those things.


My friend is watching Past Tense (the DS9 episode about the Bell Riots), and is like "Sisko is in the present. It is all normal"



I moved my work laptop from Devuan to Debian because Zscaler doesn't know you can launch an program without systemd, but somehow Thunderbird on Debian is eye searingly, upsettingly, bad.

All the other Thunderbirds I've seen are great, but Debian is doing something that I can't turn off.



For @Becky 's birthday, our 5yo wanted to make a custom PvZ mod where everything is rainbows.

So our first attempt all the work we did got eaten because the game didn't like the files. So we redid it, and then had to test.

And my son is being a proper game dev, having all his work ruined and needing to fix it

Ben Zanin reshared this.




I have a friend who is being harassed and threatened semi-anonymously via Facebook. She knows *who* it is, but Facebook and Police are characteristically being uselss.

I am kinda useless at this side of deanonymization, but does anyone have advice or resources for deanonymizing enough to get cops to move?

#infosec #batsignal

in reply to silverwizard

if you can host a file on a site where you can look at the access logs and then post a link to that file, you might be able to bait them into downloading the file which could give you their IP address in the access logs. A whois search for the IP address.could get you their ISP and geolocation information on the IP could get you the general area.

That's a lot of "ifs" and "coulds", though.

in reply to Jim Jones

here is a Forbes article (that also points to more sources) on how to do it. Beware that it isn't a quick fix, but it can work if they are persistent (and it require some legal action, which isn't always affordable). forbes.com/sites/kashmirhill/2…
in reply to Jim Jones

from there, if the police still won't do something, it turns to filing court orders to get information from the IP holders about who had the IP at the time of access and harassment.

Good luck.

This entry was edited (2 months ago)


I am reading my kid The Hobbit at bedtime, and this feels like the most authentic and fun way to read it
in reply to Mason Loring Bliss

@Mason Loring Bliss this is making me realize I can use this as an excuse to start The Dark is Rising, a series I never read as a kid
in reply to silverwizard

@silverwizard Oh, absolutely. There's no better excuse in the world. Reading about it, it reminds me of a similar-sounding story I read when I was young, but I can't remember the name now. I'll have to dig around. Something that might help me find it was that it existed as of somewhere between 1980 and 1984.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Dark…

Unknown parent

djb
@allenstenhaus memories of Cisco CF cards they charged absolutely insane prices for
in reply to silverwizard

I feel like a proper cyberpunk when I manage to pull apart a set top box, pull out the disk, and use that to rebuild my router.


Hobbesian philosophy sounds deep until you say it, "Ain't no claws when you're drinking laws"


Slack, Discord, and all of those all bind /me to italics - and it's wildly annoying because my /me instincts still exist
in reply to silverwizard

@silverwizard @🩷 eva 🩷 I've migrated mostly to XMPP (for the half dozen or so people I know who use it) but I was pretty happy with irssi for IRC. It can even pull double duty and do XMPP, though admittedly a little buggily.
This entry was edited (2 months ago)


Any #FreeBSD folk know why the rust compiler might give me

ld-elf.so.1: /usr/local/bin/../lib/librustc_driver-d829a4d8a572ebe4.so: Undefined symbol "_ZNSt3__122__libcpp_verbose_abortEPKcz"

I am worried the problem is my kernel is 13.2 but the rust package claims to be from 13.3? Is this a "just upgrade and stop worrying" situation

in reply to silverwizard

I'm neither a FreeBSD folk nor a Rust folk but that looks like a library version mismatch to me - is your libc++ the one that came with your 13.2 system? The symbol it's missing might be new in 13.3. (Not sure whether there's a feasible way to get a 13.3 libc++ without upgrading the whole system, your path of least resistance might be finding a 13.2 rust package.)
in reply to Dave

@Dave Yeah - in theory this package should be fine for all FreeBSDs - but I have a worry something happened with the package DB accidentally giving me an incompatible rustc binary - which ... shouldn't happen - I think?!
@Dave


Infosec apparently doesn't realize that cheques are ancient technology no one under 40 has seen in over a decade


Remember, the vulnerability in Yubikeys doesn't make them weaker than most sms 2fa

reshared this

in reply to Rivetgeek (He/Him)

@Rivetgeek yeah, so much of the time. someone told me that facebook tells employees to leave theirs in their laptops, which is, at least, funny.

SMS 2FA is mostly because because SMS numbers suck

in reply to silverwizard

The funny thing is mine still isn't plugged into my laptop itself. I just never unplug the Yubikey from where it is. So it's not totally pointless if someone stole my laptop (they'd have a bad time either way considering the hard drive is encrypted).


An important parenting skill is not giggling when you say "What hurts?" and they answer "all of it"


If your wrapper script requires as many or more flags/inputs than the original script, it's probably bad for you
in reply to silverwizard

(Caveat: not if it's abstracting multiple different tools on different systems)


Someone needs to write a sysadmin version of the Last Sea Shanty

A sysadmins not a sysadmin anymore

in reply to Andy H3

@Andy H3 He also does a Last Sea Shanty that I like youtube.com/watch?v=zw0FZs_J2I…

also some wildly good River Shanties around on.soundcloud.com/dWAaRJRCEY75…

I mostly love the Sea Shanty as a repository of blue collar solidarity songs that are great for groups and to scream, so I don't understand the love for the Wellerman, though enjoy it fine



404media.co/this-is-doom-runni…

This is the *stupidest* use of LLMs - right?

The primary problems with video games are:
1) too well written
2) don't suffer from enough bloat
3) run too quickly

Luckily Google has fixed it in a way even worse than Stadia!

reshared this

in reply to silverwizard

I agree keep it running on bacteria not the software equivalent of an elementary school kid that pees his pants daily and licks the windows because he likes the taste/


Got to pull a coworker into a call and just explain logs to them

That's what they call a good day?



Listen, if your branching and commit message strategy takes more than 15 minutes to explain. And I need to work with every team and this is just yours.

I'm not gonna follow it.



I finally finished Siege of Dragonspear in my quest to get through all of Baldur's Gate.

I am shocked by how unpleasant it was to play through.

Only having BG1 to compare to - it's like night and day.



Explaining why my Wizard RPG character can't write:
"I wanted to make sure I mastered all the letters before I started figuring out writing"


I really need to stop assuming that most developers have a mental model of DNS delegation in their head.

I need to accept that I'm the weirdo here.

in reply to silverwizard

i find myself expanding that a little bit, having to remember that not all devs “grew up” as system/network admins.
in reply to Craig Brozefsky 🇵🇸

@Craig Brozefsky 🇵🇸 yeah, there's lots of cultural contexts, but I constantly assume that things that make The Internet Work are default skills tech people have.


Does anyone else listen to this sometimes? archive.org/details/cyber-fina…

It's such an important artifact

in reply to silverwizard

This is wildly important. It's bitter and it's complicated. But it's probably the real Cyberpunk. It's good. Listen to people think about journalism during a tragedy.


I am currently regularly dealing with Zscaler support and Drata support.

Drata support is awful because you need to get answers from an LLM before you can talk to it. But the LLM is worthless because it just puts out a segment from the knowledge base and you only contact support when things are broken.

Zscaler support is worthless because they're undertrained and given a flow chart to follow. The flow chart means they just parrot the knowledge base repeatedly.

Drata's support is better because there's only one human trapped in this hell.




Zscaler seeing a user has an IP in 100.0.0.0/8 tells me that wont work because that's a Zscaler internal IP.

Of course, the user's ISP is misusing CGNAT and also claiming IANA reserved IPs are theirs.

Abolish legacy IP

Unknown parent

@The Psychotic Network Ferret the problem was that neither group using 100.6.0.0/16 *owned* it. Both of them were using it for extra IPv4 space.

And I've been a ISP grunt, I know we want IPv4 to die, but there's some ISPs that have bonkers IPv4 stacks and massive CGNATs without a whisper of IPv6



Me vs @Becky parenting
@Becky - buys the kids mars bars
Sean - tells the kids Mars Bars are made by war criminals and then starts teaching them to make nougat
This entry was edited (3 months ago)