“I know not all that may be coming, but be it what it will, I'll go to it laughing.”
InfoSec, partially recovering.
Female sex parts, not here for dating.
Big time ally, part time anarchist.
Ask and ye shall recieve.
I make Art.

“I know not all that may be coming, but be it what it will, I'll go to it laughing.”
InfoSec, partially recovering.
Female sex parts, not here for dating.
Big time ally, part time anarchist.
Ask and ye shall recieve.
I make Art.
You may be in a position where leaders in your company are hot to turn on Microsoft Copilot Recall.
Your best counterargument isn't threat actors stealing company data.
It's that opposing counsel will request the recall data and demand it not be disabled as part of e-discovery proceedings.
The threat that keeps your executives up at night are lawyers, not hackers.
Following massive customer pushback after it announced the new AI-powered Recall for Copilot+ PCs last month, Microsoft says it will update the feature to be more secure and require customers to opt in to enable it.
Following massive customer pushback after it announced the new AI-powered Recall for Copilot+ PCs last month, Microsoft says it will update the feature to be more secure and require customers to opt in to enable it.
For you laggards:
https://www.howtogeek.com/tails-os-privacy-focused-linux-distro/
Get it here, 1 million users in not enough, but hey it is a start.
I'll just leave this here:
Leopold Aschenbrenner, June 2024 You can see the future first in San Francisco. Over the past year, the talk of the town has shifted from $10 billion compute clusters to $100 billion clusters to trillion-dollar clusters. Every six months another zero is added to the boardroom plans. Behind the scenes, there’s a fierce scramble to
The thing is, 30 years ago wide window borders probably were a good idea. When you realise that, you probably will want to look back at previous systems and see how "windows" have evolved over time, what did they gain and what did they lose over time.
One of the earliest windowing systems, Xerox Star, did not offer any built-in chrome or buttons for the windows. If the programmer did not add "close" button, there was no way to close the window. I don't have an emulator at hand, but I think windows were not resizeable either.
Apple mostly copied that into Lisa, but added two important things in 1984's Mac: "close" button and "resize" button. And yes, you cannot resize the window by dragging its boundaries. Only resize button.
Makers of Amiga Workbench (and GEM) added buttons for quick resizing of the windows.
NeXTSTEP from 1988 was seemingly the first one to use "X" icon to close windows. It still had "resize" button to resize the windows arbitrarily.
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