Programming/wilderness adventures/cybersecurity/livable cities
Formerly: CTO @ YourStake.org
Brooklyn, NY 🇨🇭🇺🇸
| Website | https://a.drien.com |
| Github | https://github.com/drien |
Programming/wilderness adventures/cybersecurity/livable cities
Formerly: CTO @ YourStake.org
Brooklyn, NY 🇨🇭🇺🇸
| Website | https://a.drien.com |
| Github | https://github.com/drien |
The clearest benefit of AI coding assistants is actually just getting started with things I'm putting off:
1) Think about how much I really really don't want to write an integration with this dusty API that sometimes returns XML and other times returns a Java stack trace with a 200 status code.
2) Ask the AI to do it for me.
3) Review the code.
4) It doesn't work.
5) Ok. Screw it. Now I am coding.
6) Drink more coffee.
🤖 ☕
I thought I understood the extent to which the broad availability of mobile location data has exacerbated countless privacy and security challenges. That is, until I was invited along with four other publications to be a virtual observer in a 2-week test run of Babel Street, a service that lets users draw a digital polygon around nearly any location on a map of the world, and view a time-lapse history of the mobile devices seen coming in and out of the area.
The issue isn't that there's some dodgy company offering this as a poorly-vetted service: It's that *anyone* willing to spend a little money can now build this capability themselves.
I'll be updating this story with links to reporting from other publications also invited, including 404 Media, Haaretz, NOTUS, and The New York Times. All of these stories will make clear that mobile location data is set to massively complicate several hot-button issues, from the tracking of suspected illegal immigrants or women seeking abortions, to harassing public servants who are already in the crosshairs over baseless conspiracy theories and increasingly hostile political rhetoric against government employees.
https://krebsonsecurity.com/2024/10/the-global-surveillance-free-for-all-in-mobile-ad-data/
So interesting to see what comes through after turning on catch-all emails for my domains.
This message is 100%, indisputable, straight-up spam from NextDoor. They invented an email address at my business domain that has never, ever existed ([email protected]) to try to get me to sign up. They even got my address correct, but.... I already have an account, and my name is, as far as I know, unique in the US.
I have real email addresses public on my work (https://incinc.io) and personal (https://a.drien.com) websites, but somehow their spam software decided to generate this new address. They must bounce an extraordinary volume of these signup invites.
Igor Gorgan, the former chief of the Moldovan General Staff who left his position in 2021, has been a long-time informant for Russian military intelligence and continues his activities. An investigation by The Insider and Moldovan journalists revealed his ongoing collaboration through Telegram communications with Colonel Alexei Makarov. Gorgan has used his connections in the Moldovan Ministry of Defense to provide valuable information to the GRU.
The Insider получил доступ к переписке в Telegram экс-начальника генштаба Молдовы Игоря Горгана с его куратором из ГРУ полковником Алексеем Макаровым — Горган регулярно докладывал о внутренней политической обстановке в республике и передавал данные о визитах представителей Минобороны Украины, которые закупали военную технику и снаряды для своих вооруженных сил. «Молдавский связной» работал в генштабе до конца 2021 года, пока новый президент Майя Санду не отправила его в отставку. А накануне массовой высылки из Молдовы российских дипломатов-шпионов в июле 2023 года он устроился на работу в ООН. Пользуясь своими старыми связями в Минобороны Молдовы, Горган остается важным информатором ГРУ.