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A man says he was forced to hack into a domestic Indian airline's website to find his missing luggage. Let he who is without luggage throw the first hack
'The airline also said it was "reviewing this case in detail and would like to state that our IT processes are completely robust".' <-- riiiiiiight
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So, will he be prosecuted like the poor guy in Missouri who did the same thing and discovered lists of SSNs for Missouri state employees?
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The reporter was only persecuted by bloviating politicians. The prosecutor refused to file charges.
Missouri will not prosecute 'hacker' reporter for daring to view state website HTML | ZDNet[^]
Did you ever see history portrayed as an old man with a wise brow and pulseless heart, weighing all things in the balance of reason?
Is not rather the genius of history like an eternal, imploring maiden, full of fire, with a burning heart and flaming soul, humanly warm and humanly beautiful?
--Zachris Topelius
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Are companies farther along in AI adoption? Do they have working applications in production? Finding actual intelligence left to the reader
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When a thief looks at a wise man, all he sees is his pockets. When an AI looks at a wise man, all it sees is a pattern of pockets.
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SerenityOS, which started out as a one-man project in 2018, has now got to the point where its creator proudly announced that its web browser passes the Acid3 browser test. Is it The Year of SerenityOS yet?
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Microsoft pushed back strongly against the claim from its business rival, calling it “unhelpful.” "When two tribes go to war, a point is all that you can score"
Just try not to get caught between them.
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Google seems to have a real issue with the fact that Microsoft is beating the pants off them in business and government installations. Google also claimed the Chromium based Edge wasn't as secure as Chrome because it didn't use Google's security services.
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Wondering about Windows updates for PCs or kiosks, billboards and rollercoasters? Microsoft has it covered. Please do not ride your rollercoaster during updates
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We believe our technical interviews should be as similar as possible to the way we work at GitHub. Do you want fries with that take-home test?
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Beacon in the Galaxy is the latest in a series of attempts to contact other lifeforms in the universe. "NO KILL I"
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The Horta!
The difficult we do right away...
...the impossible takes slightly longer.
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Don't look for Microsoft to provide drag-and-drop functionality for Blazor, though it can still be done via JavaScript interop. Because if you drag and drop your blazer, you need to take it for dry cleaning
I mean, duh!
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There are many benefits to switching to a shift-left approach. The practice of shift left encourages collaboration between teams. It can help reduce inefficiencies and bottlenecks during software development that arise from defects in the code or miscommunication. "It's just a jump to the left, and then a step to the right"
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Ah, another article where they make up a term and then ramble incoherently, repeating the obvious.
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Quote: Shift-left emphasizes finding and fixing bugs and defects as early as possible in development. Good luck with that. I've never, in 30+ years, worked in an environment that put testing (not to mention documentation) to the "left" of the workflow. There was one exception. Ruby on Rails. But that's because you have to, otherwise nothing works and nobody understands how the code works otherwise.
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Fixing bugs and defects as early as possible isn't always a good idea. That's what you do in a release branch, where it's damn the architecture. In the development branch, it may be necessary to evolve the architecture instead of adding another kludge.
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A new cybercrime ploy sees hackers hijacking law enforcement email addresses to demand troves of user data from tech platforms. It's working. Do we have to call fake police to arrest them?
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Hmm, perhaps asking for a warrant is a good idea.
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They're faking the warrant by taking advantage of seriously broken warrant system.
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From what I read, they presented no warrant, claiming an emergency.
But yes, the warrant system is broken.
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A gravity assist helps the 'scope see a star 12.9 billion light-years away "You thought that I would need a crystal ball to see right through the haze"
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I think I see my long lost car keys! That's about the only place I haven't looked.
"the debugger doesn't tell me anything because this code compiles just fine" - random QA comment
"Facebook is where you tell lies to your friends. Twitter is where you tell the truth to strangers." - chriselst
"I don't drink any more... then again, I don't drink any less." - Mike Mullikins uncle
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