Today, 16 years ago, Debian published a security advisory announcing CVE-2008-0166, a severe bug in their OpenSSL package that effectively broke the random number generator and limited the key space to a few ten thousand keys. The vulnerability affected Debian+Ubuntu between 2006 and 2008. In 2007, an email signature system called DKIM was introduced. Is it possible that people configured DKIM in 2007, never changed their key, and are still vulnerable to CVE-2008-0166? https://16years.secvuln.info/
I wonder why the M&S Food Hall smell is very different to other supermarkets? Most places go for a mixture of vanilla, yeast and leafy, but in M&S it's always a kind of salty, humousy attack-olive kind of smell.
It's a Rolexy LinkedIn kind of smell; an Opportunities for Networking, kind of smell; a Let Me Show You Our New Kitchen kind of smell; a Trap You In A Corner To Talk About AI and Bitcoin kind of Smell.
Such a fearful scent -- M&S so clearly scented Not For Me.