Monthly Archives: May 2021

A new replication crisis: Research that is less likely to be true is cited more

Source: Hacker News

Article note: So, the feeling that hype-compliant splashy bullshit is more rewarded than quality research is ...probably actually true.
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Chrome testing RSS-powered ‘Follow’ button

Source: Hacker News

Article note: ...If it props up the RSS ecosystem, I'm not complaining. It's not a way I'd use feeds, but it's not a bad idea.
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I’m leaving Freenode for a new network

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Man, freenode has been a constant without too much drama for decades. I haven't been real active in long enough that I have no idea what the situation is, but enough of the old guard leadership are bailing that it can't be good. At least it's an open protocol and tooling so everyone can just move.
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Adding a Russian Keyboard to Protect against Ransomware

Source: Schneier on Security

Article note: That's hilarious, clever, and a little cynical.

A lot of Russian malware — the malware that targeted the Colonial Pipeline, for example — won’t install on computers with a Cyrillic keyboard installed. Brian Krebs wonders if this could be a useful defense:

In Russia, for example, authorities there generally will not initiate a cybercrime investigation against one of their own unless a company or individual within the country’s borders files an official complaint as a victim. Ensuring that no affiliates can produce victims in their own countries is the easiest way for these criminals to stay off the radar of domestic law enforcement agencies.

[…]

DarkSide, like a great many other malware strains, has a hard-coded do-not-install list of countries which are the principal members of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) — former Soviet satellites that mostly have favorable relations with the Kremlin.

[…]

Simply put, countless malware strains will check for the presence of one of these languages on the system, and if they’re detected the malware will exit and fail to install.

[…]

Will installing one of these languages keep your Windows computer safe from all malware? Absolutely not. There is plenty of malware that doesn’t care where in the world you are. And there is no substitute for adopting a defense-in-depth posture, and avoiding risky behaviors online.

But is there really a downside to taking this simple, free, prophylactic approach? None that I can see, other than perhaps a sinking feeling of capitulation. The worst that could happen is that you accidentally toggle the language settings and all your menu options are in Russian.

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Recovering “lost” treasure-filled floppy discs with an oscilloscope

Source: Hacker News

Article note: This is super cool. I've been thinking I should pick up a FluxEngine or one of the later Greaseweazle variants to ease dealing with my pile of ancient hardware, but this goes well past.
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The man who didn’t invent Flamin’ Hot Cheetos

Source: Hacker News

Article note: That is some impressive bullshitting/ladder climbing feedback loop. Like a staggering but unsurprising faction of such things.
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Mac the Knife

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Oooh, MAME is getting some serious work to make its Mac cores usable.
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A paradigm shift to combat indoor respiratory infection

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Our buildings should be better ventilated for a bunch of reasons, the pandemic transmitting on lingering ultra fine particles just showed how bad it was. Everything is under-ventilated and in too coarse an area. Office stank and kennel cough. Meeting rooms that should have CO2 detectors that show how impaired the occupants are. Etc. It's expensive for institutions to have their building ventilation not be awful, and peons suffer the bulk of the consequences, so it's something that's hard to get fixed in the state of our society.
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Battlestar Galactica Lessons from Ransomware to the Pandemic

Source: Hacker News

Article note: I always hear the "You hooked it up to the phone, didn't you? Dade! Turn the shower off! You screw up again and you won't get into college!" line from the beginning of Hackers (1995) when I look at IoT crap, but BSG is probably a more timely reference. Incomprehensible, homogeneous, unattended, and distributed systems(in, to make another reference, the Leslie Lamport "A distributed system is one in which the failure of a computer you didn't even know existed can render your own computer unusable." sense) inserted into critical tasks are an _enormous_ problem, and come with a ton of perverse incentives.
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Reverse Engineering an Unknown Microcontroller

Source: Hacker News

Article note: That's very cool, with excellent process docs for figuring out uCs. I like that it's written in a way that my better 287 students could follow after they finish the class, but still exposes enough detail to be substantial.
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