11 Followers
37 Following
27 Posts
Man builds Johnny 5 robot from Short Circuit film

Ryan Howard has spent six years creating the replica from the iconic 1980s film.

BBC News

@SwiftOnSecurity I want ChatGPT to able to create an infinite number of legit-looking fake company mailboxes & infinite files so that we can have thousands or millions of SME-sized full-org honeypots complete with web site, financials, employee personas, Teams chat logs, HR disciplinaries, PIPs, invoices, orders... all fake. Obviously some of the files would contain canaries & actual malware.

The aim would be to consume vast amounts of time, resources & patience of ransomware groups with several million "honey orgs."

Disrupt & deny.

@rutherdan If it's 8 euros, they could instead require that people deposit two bushels of corn at check-in to cover the SAF. Business class would be 18 bushels for the 1% SAF, which is apparently about 457 kilograms. A bit awkward to organise, logistically, but possible. Perhaps the airport could have a vehicle trailer leasing scheme.

If they went 100% SAF, then business travellers would need to haul around 45 tonnes of corn with them to the airport terminal to cover the SAF cost. Unfortunately, there seems to be a 40-ton max gross weight limit for trucks in France, so presumably two truck deliveries of feedstock may be required for business class flights.

Of course, the question then becomes whether customers should also deposit additional corn to cover the CO2e from the methane-based fertilizer used to grow the original corn.

... but the the question *then* becomes... since methane gas was needed to make the fertilizer to make the corn or soy, why not just use Jet-A and skip the inefficient process of using methane to make the crops? Perhaps business travellers might then only need to drive a single Jet-A tanker to the airport.

Imagine a world where shareholder returns were not the primary concern of the third largest company in existence.

Microsoft could prioritise customer security and implement this very quickly.

It would also probably reduce their network log storage requirements ($$) by quite a bit...

@GossiTheDog Both MPLog *and* the Defender logs don't show everything which was deleted. Monday will be shit.

My standalone test VM had loads of desktop icons deleted, but there's no mention in any on-device logs: Chrome x2, Waterfox, Waterfox Classic, Reader x2, Edge x2, TeamViewer, VLC, Proton, Irfanview.

Doing a before/after on c:\programdata\microsoft\windows\start menu\programs shows that only one entry was deleted - YogaDNS - so presumably Defender onlydeleted things which were accessed. So "only" the things which people use regularly were presumably deleted... ugh

@rmceoin The other IPs which I'm aware of are these OVH ones.

51.195.5.185
51.89.192.129
162.19.19.14
162.19.19.15

And I think simplewebanalysis\.com (AWS) might be related (i forget) - someone else mentioned it on twitter thread a while ago.

@rmceoin The IPs which they use for their domains rotate among what seems like the entire ServerGuy\.com range, plus a few which don't seem to change over time, like the ADVANCEDHOSTERS-NET ones.

serverguy:
142.91.156.0/22
172.255.0.0/21
173.233.136.0/22
23.109.168.0/22
23.109.248.0/22
23.109.80.0/22
23.109.84.0/22

Some of their infra is behind Cloudflare but just blocking every serverguy range, plus the few other IPs which don't seem to change, seems to do the trick.

@r000t It depends on what state the body is in. It's not as simple as just CICO or thermodynamics.

Big calorie-dense meals will result in +5-15% TDEE diet-induced thermogenesis (you run hotter / move more). So you can eat a bit more, but stay the same weight.

Alternatively, with a long period of calorie restriction, adaptive thermogenesis kicks in and you have a lower TDEE, so if you returned to eating "normal" meals you'd gain more.

Then there's the impact of stress & lack of sleep on cortisol levels, hormone abnormalities, insulin response etc on fat deposition. Everyone is different.

Just saying CICO / thermodymic laws is not the full picture. But it could perhaps be true if you narrow it down to specifically people with an "okay" diet, good sleep, no health issues (and no previous eating disorder) over a long timescale to average everything out.