Whenever I see comments like this about #Wayland I always have to ask, who do you think would be developing this new protocol? Every single #Linux graphics developers agrees that Wayland is where we're going, the problem is nobody agrees on how it should look
And yes that is a killer feature that all 3 enterprise distros (#Ubuntu, #SUSE & #RedHat) offer - even tho behind paywalls.
People who use Windows in 2023 are completely lost or just #TechIlliterates and if they use it on critical infrastructure, they should be banned from touching anything w/ a computer!
Scammers are getting cleverer. My spouse was just nearly phished as they caught her by phone just out of the shower with a "fraud alert," and gave her enough information she gave them a little—before realizing they weren't legit. They offered her the first six digits of her card, which means they probably knew the card issuer but not the full number. They wanted her to read the full card and she called foul and then called the issuer, who confirmed nobody had called, and hard card replaced.
Unless folks have worked with payment card security (#PCIDSS) they often don’t realize the first six digits are often handled like the last four. They don’t require the same level of security precautions as the full card number to they are more likely to show up in breaches.
Also, the first six (called the BIN) are potentially deducible based on other personal info because they follow a consistent format designating card brand, etc.
@w4tsnhttps://221b.uk/safe-automatic-decryption-luks-partition-tpm2: What is the point of encrypting your drive when it can be decrypted by itself, no password or security card/key required (if I am understanding your article correctly) giving unwanted entities access to your decrypted drive?
The idea behind "self-encrypting drives" as per #OPAL spec is to formally comply with #PCIDSS without using any good OS that does decent & secure crypto.