@shaknais@mastodon.social
@shaknais@mastodon.social avatar

shaknais

@shaknais@mastodon.social

Author | Aussie | Written all kinds of tales over the years - romance, murder mystery, science fiction and fantasy and more.
Warning: Short term memory loss.

This profile is from a federated server and may be incomplete. Browse more on the original instance.

winter, to random
@winter@translunar.academy avatar

Sparrow said that I regularly fall for a girl/etc every year since they met me, and then listed them all :hiding:

shaknais,
@shaknais@mastodon.social avatar

@winter So... They wanna be on that list?

BasicAppleGuy, to random
@BasicAppleGuy@mastodon.social avatar

True or False: Which are actual Apple display names? πŸ‘¨πŸ»β€πŸ«

shaknais,
@shaknais@mastodon.social avatar

@BasicAppleGuy *(True * 11)

feld, (edited ) to random
@feld@bikeshed.party avatar

> One of the most notable propagation methods is Ebury using its presence inside data centers to perform AitM attacks at scale on servers deemed to be high value.

what the fuck is an AitM attack?

edit: the term is Adversary in the Middle and it sucks because it's misleading and I was cranky, baby needed his bottle^Wcoffee

shaknais,
@shaknais@mastodon.social avatar

@feld Adversary-in-the-Middle.

You take control of something like a phishing site, and tweak their attack into something that will better suit yourself.

One attacker hiding behind another.

shaknais,
@shaknais@mastodon.social avatar

@feld No, a MitM attack, is where you position yourself inbetween the client and their provider.

An AitM is where you hijack someone trying to pull that off. They usually don't realise it's you, and blame the first attacker, as you make off with the goods.

shaknais,
@shaknais@mastodon.social avatar

@feld The Adversary in the Middle is the original attacker.

Because between the successful attacker and the target, is a patsy. The original attacker. They're in-between.

We use a new term, because the new attacker isn't usually noticed. They sacrifice the AitM, framing them, and get away scot-free.

shaknais,
@shaknais@mastodon.social avatar

@feld The term for the unnoticed attacker is usually just "the attacker".

e.g. The attacker hid themselves by utilising AitM methodology.

nixCraft, to random
@nixCraft@mastodon.social avatar

Be honest. Why do you dislike the .webp format? What did it do to you? πŸ€”

shaknais,
@shaknais@mastodon.social avatar
decryption, to random
@decryption@aus.social avatar

the same guy that made FFMPEG also made QEMU, fucken hell mate, leave some for the rest of us

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fabrice_Bellard

shaknais,
@shaknais@mastodon.social avatar

@decryption I'd list this geniuses accomplishments... But just about everything on his homepage is utterly game changing.

https://bellard.org/

thelinuxcast, to random
@thelinuxcast@fosstodon.org avatar

I wonder why Nautilus is so effing slow? Sometimes takes 20 seconds to enter a directory. Does not happen in any other file manager

shaknais,
@shaknais@mastodon.social avatar

@thelinuxcast Two things cause Nautilus to slow down massively, especially compared to other file managers.

First, the preview tech does a ton of stat calls, to work out what to show you. Disable it, and things get about 20% faster. They know about it, but no one has done a patch to fix it in over a decade, so I wouldn't be hopeful.

Secondly, the more bookmarks you have, the slower things get. Every time you open a folder it pings every single bookmark for some reason.

donni, to random
@donni@mastodon.social avatar

Jurassic Park didn't even have ONE swing set

shaknais,
@shaknais@mastodon.social avatar

@donni But they did have a canteen full of jelly! Unmelted, even, somehow, after days in a storm.

RickiTarr, to random
@RickiTarr@beige.party avatar

Oppenheimer is Godzilla's Dad.

I don't make the rules, don't get mad at me.

shaknais,
@shaknais@mastodon.social avatar
shaknais, to random
@shaknais@mastodon.social avatar

Well, my search engine, aimed at weighting more towards content than recent or SEO, etc, is up!

Who wants to break it...?

https://rustysearch.org/

nixCraft, to linux
@nixCraft@mastodon.social avatar

the existential question ... #linux

shaknais,
@shaknais@mastodon.social avatar

@nixCraft Don't worry, run0 is probably going to break it...

cirrus, to javascript
@cirrus@mstdn.social avatar

Grumble. is doing my head in. Why do Angular packages create a new package.json in the dist folder and expect you to cd into there before running npm publish?!?!

I have a monorepo with lots of other non-Angular packages. I use Changesets to manage versioning and releases.

Now, because Angular can't just use npm like it's meant to be used, I'm stuck.

shaknais,
@shaknais@mastodon.social avatar

@cirrus Any chance you can just use a symbolic link to work around it?

golgaloth, to random
@golgaloth@writing.exchange avatar

As long as it's not a fully automatic bear, we'll be fine.

shaknais,
@shaknais@mastodon.social avatar

@golgaloth Just gotta get yourself a ManBearPig, even if the right say it doesn't exist.

shaknais, to random
@shaknais@mastodon.social avatar

#WritersCoffeeClub OMG! What happened to your MC's parents?

Nothing. Phoebe is just an accountant. I mean, one who fell through a portal to another world, where she happens to be the subject of prophecy after prophecy...
But she's not a witch. She's rather adamant about that. Even if she managed to summon a wolf made of fire. Or fight an actual witch, spell for spell. Not a witch.

Gruna's family... Well... Or Elion's... Uh... That witch from before? She um... Killed them all. A sacrifice...

shaknais,
@shaknais@mastodon.social avatar

You can actually read this one for free, over here, as it rolls out.

https://www.royalroad.com/fiction/83567/phoebes-destiny

The print book is coming. Slowly. But it is coming, too.

dgar, to random
@dgar@aus.social avatar

Thanks to everyone who explained β€œplethora” to me.

It means a lot.

shaknais,
@shaknais@mastodon.social avatar

@dgar I wanna hear you rapping out a plethora on plethora now.

nixCraft, to random
@nixCraft@mastodon.social avatar

What's the most unusual place you've ever coded from? πŸ€”

shaknais,
@shaknais@mastodon.social avatar

@nixCraft One of the most fun things I ever did, was push a BASIC program, which I wrote, from a - can't remember what's it's called

There used to be these tiny computers, basically a keyboard and a 1" screen, that a reporter would use. Powered by a half-dozen AA batteries. You could write up some text, and then plug in and fire it off to the home server over telnet

Well, I used one of those to update an IBM server, whilst I was at a football match, to fix the "automatic" scorecard system

RickiTarr, to random
@RickiTarr@beige.party avatar

That Novelty Cup you had to have on vacation, you'll never use it again.

shaknais,
@shaknais@mastodon.social avatar

@RickiTarr Who hurt you? Why are you attacking us all?πŸ˜†

shaknais,
@shaknais@mastodon.social avatar

@ccdudley85 A towel is about the most massively useful thing an interstellar hitchhiker can have. Partly it has great practical value. You can wrap it around you for warmth as you bound across the cold moons of Jaglan Beta; you can lie on it on the brilliant marble-sanded beaches of Santraginus V; you can wave your towel in emergencies as a distress signal, and of course dry yourself off with it if it still seems to be clean enough.

orci, to random
@orci@mastodon.social avatar

Groceries.

shaknais,
@shaknais@mastodon.social avatar

@orci My local was sold out of CurlyWurlies yesterday! 😿

LRRRonEarth, to random
@LRRRonEarth@beige.party avatar

ADDING "BEFORE:2023" TO GOOGLE SEARCHES MAKES IT FEEL LIKE YOU'VE TRAVELED BACK IN TIME TO WHEN THE INTERNET WORKED.

shaknais,
@shaknais@mastodon.social avatar

@LRRRonEarth @RavenLuni
Could always have a look at https://clew.se/

peterrenshaw, to privacy
@peterrenshaw@ioc.exchange avatar

β€œAustralia’s spies and cops want β€˜accountable encryption’ - aka access to ”

β€œhe outlined an argument that a dynamic tension exists between security and technology, Burgess added β€œencryption protects our and enables our …and creates safe spaces for violent to operate, and .” labelled encryption β€œclearly a good thing, a positive for our democracy and our economy” because it β€œprotects , it enables communications and transactions.” But he noted it also provides with , which is why has laws that make it possible to access encrypted messages.”

/ <https://www.theregister.com/2024/04/25/asio_afp_accountable_encryption/>

shaknais,
@shaknais@mastodon.social avatar

@peterrenshaw Either encryption is secure, or it's not. Want another Optus-sized data breach? Undermine the system that protects you accessing a webpage, the system that allows online shopping to even happen.

The people in charge know there is no grey. They're willing to risk every citizen losing their bank accounts (again, encrypted), just to go after a few people.

RickiTarr, to random
@RickiTarr@beige.party avatar

I'm going to start writing all my posts on old English, and daring people to correct my grammar and spelling.

shaknais,
@shaknais@mastodon.social avatar

@RickiTarr Swelc se Δ‘erisene smΓ©ae eallwundorum.

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