@ben@mastodon.bentasker.co.uk
@ben@mastodon.bentasker.co.uk avatar

ben

@ben@mastodon.bentasker.co.uk

I'm Ben and I'm rubbish at writing bio's.

I'm a general geek, who's core skillsets boil down to trouble-shooting and reverse engineering.

I mostly talk about #Tech, #Monitoring, #SoftwareDevelopment, #Privacy & #Security

If you want to send messages encrypted with PGP, you can find my key in the links below.

My Toots auto-delete after a month (https://www.bentasker.co.uk/posts/blog/opinion/arguments-for-and-against-auto-deleting-mastodon-toots.html)

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Edent, to business
@Edent@mastodon.social avatar

🆕 blog! “Is it rude to make a profit from your friends?”

You're in a restaurant with a group of friends. The waiter won't let you split the bill, so you offer to pay for it on your card and have your friends send you their share. How much would you charge them for that service? That sounds absurd, right? OK, you might agree to split the […]

👀 Read more: https://shkspr.mobi/blog/2024/05/is-it-rude-to-make-a-profit-from-your-friends/

ben,
@ben@mastodon.bentasker.co.uk avatar

@Edent IMO there are 2 ways to think about it to make it more palatable:

  • The profit enables you to do the next thing - i.e. people are contributing towards the next fun thing you'll do (which might be beers that night)

  • Give a predetermined %age of the "profit" to a cause that means something to you

Either one allows you to charge a markup and therefore not undercut someone who does rely on profitable prices for an income, whilst continuing to enjoy what you're doing

davidho, (edited ) to Hydrogen
@davidho@mastodon.world avatar

Honest question: I measure gases as a career, and I’m always fixing leaks in my instruments*. How do people who push as a home heating solution propose to avoid catastrophic leaks?

*I use Swagelok fittings, the same ones used on airplanes and in industrial settings.

ben,
@ben@mastodon.bentasker.co.uk avatar

@davidho I believe they're suggesting use of a novel sealant: pure, unadulterated hope

ben, to random
@ben@mastodon.bentasker.co.uk avatar

> The Metropolitan Police say that around one in every 33,000 people who walk by its cameras is misidentified.
>
> But the error count is much higher once an someone is actually flagged. One in 40 alerts so far this year has been a false positive.

Sorry, do the Met think 1 in 33,000 is a good failure rate?

That's abysmal even before you get onto the false positive rate or before you look at outcomes and realise you may incorrectly deprive someone of their liberty

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-69055945

ben,
@ben@mastodon.bentasker.co.uk avatar

Arguably, this technology should not be in use at all, but with a failure rate that high it definitely shouldn't be on our streets.

But, I suspect vendors are probably pushing to get it deployed (and collect their money) before laws catch up and better regulate it.

And the Met are... well, being the Met.

revk, (edited ) to random
@revk@toot.me.uk avatar

OK I’m going to float an idea on here. It looks like we won’t be able to cancel a “broadband switch” from losing side. So won’t be able to do “anti slamming”. Shame.

But to switch using OTS you have to have a match on surname (using some fun, and vague, rules for accented characters).

So we could allow customers to set any surname on a line, and use as a sort of “password”.

After all, you can call yourself what you like, and we have to accept changes to personal information.

ben,
@ben@mastodon.bentasker.co.uk avatar

@revk Could make responding to court orders fun too: Between the requested dates, the IP was assigned to Ben DontYouTouchMyFuckingLine of....

revk, to random
@revk@toot.me.uk avatar

This bloody one touch switching stuff has taken me nearly a week now, annoying. But working out how it will impact the ordering process. Essentially it makes it worse! More steps, more info to provide. All to save someone ceasing some other type of service by themselves. But getting there.

What worries me is the ease of “slamming” and I gather we won’t be able to stop slamming from losing side any more, which is worrying.

ben,
@ben@mastodon.bentasker.co.uk avatar

@interpipes @revk

I'm guessing the lack of protections in the OTS process is probably a symptom of that too - if you were to add a "don't switch" flag that the current provider needs to unset first, you run straight back into the Virgin Media problem.

The whole thing basically boils down to trying to solve people problems with software (which rarely works)

ben,
@ben@mastodon.bentasker.co.uk avatar

@niloc @interpipes @revk

> If an end-user never agreed to the switch in the first place, surely the new provider has no basis in law to recover any monies from them

The new supplier essentially claims that the end-user did agree.

Normally that agreement is something really tenuous (like confirming your post-code or even just agreeing to receive "more information").

Those wouldn't stand up in court, but most people likely fold and pay the bills when threatened with that.

ben,
@ben@mastodon.bentasker.co.uk avatar

@niloc @interpipes @revk But yeah, it just needs Ofcom to pull their collective thumbs out

edavies, to random
@edavies@functional.cafe avatar

Excellent news.

But what have the Tories seen coming that means they don't want to hang on till the autumn?

ben,
@ben@mastodon.bentasker.co.uk avatar

@edavies I'm hoping it's just self-preservation on his part - realising they might have time to replace him before October.

But yeah.... seems more likely they've spotted something and want someone else to carry the blame

ben, to random
@ben@mastodon.bentasker.co.uk avatar

Yesssssss.... it's finally time.

Get the cunts out.

GossiTheDog, to random
@GossiTheDog@cyberplace.social avatar

For those who aren’t aware, Microsoft have decided to bake essentially an infostealer into base Windows OS and enable by default.

From the Microsoft FAQ: “Note that Recall does not perform content moderation. It will not hide information such as passwords or financial account numbers."

Info is stored locally - but rather than something like Redline stealing your local browser password vault, now they can just steal the last 3 months of everything you’ve typed and viewed in one database.

video/mp4

ben,
@ben@mastodon.bentasker.co.uk avatar

@ianbetteridge @GossiTheDog

Without recall, they can only really do so going forwards.

The addition of Recall means every part of the last 3 months of your activity is now in scope and in one easily accessible place and format.

Being compromised now and future activity being at risk isn't great, but at least provides a window of opportunity to spot it.

Being compromised and having everything you did for the last 3 months at-risk is a pretty big escalation IMO

ben,
@ben@mastodon.bentasker.co.uk avatar

@ianbetteridge @GossiTheDog

Discoverability is quite a huge point too. You might notice a keylogger (because your AV eventually gets a new signature and catches it).

Will you notice that recall has been turned back on?

ben,
@ben@mastodon.bentasker.co.uk avatar

@ianbetteridge @GossiTheDog That's something at least.

ben,
@ben@mastodon.bentasker.co.uk avatar

@ianbetteridge @GossiTheDog

I guess the problem, for them, is that if they made it abundantly clear it's running (e.g. by turning the desktop red or pop up a notification periodcally), it'd put users off using it.

I'd argue that's probably a sign it's not a great idea to have it, but YMMV.

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