Christophe B. 

353 Followers
77 Following
1.9K Posts
Freelance #Android apps author, cinephile, music lover, traveler.
LocationBelgium
Tech bloghttps://bladecoder.medium.com
Githubhttps://github.com/cbeyls

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"Identity protection company Aura has confirmed that an unauthorized party gained access to nearly 900,000 customer records containing names and email addresses...Aura is a consumer digital safety firm that sells identity theft protection, credit and fraud monitoring, and online security tools for phishing protection, positioning itself as an all-in-one service for online protection..."

https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/aura-confirms-data-breach-exposing-900-000-marketing-contacts/

Aura confirms data breach exposing 900,000 marketing contacts

Identity protection company Aura has confirmed that an authorized party gained access to nearly 900,000 customer records containing names and email addresses.

BleepingComputer
If you're late to the party like me, here's one of the most interesting articles about using LLMs for coding:
"Your LLM Doesn't Write Correct Code. It Writes Plausible Code."
https://blog.katanaquant.com/p/your-llm-doesnt-write-correct-code
Your LLM Doesn't Write Correct Code. It Writes Plausible Code.

One of the simplest tests you can run on a database:

Vagabond Research

#Samsung devices from today can no longer install custom ROMs.

Odin is gone and the Download Mode is also gone, which makes life hard also for repair services that want to restore a device.

This is your daily reminder that #Android is a liability, and major hardware manufacturers who ship Google’s version of Android are a liability too.

We need to get Linux phones to work, and we need manufacturers who are aligned with our principles.

https://www.androidauthority.com/samsung-disables-odin-removes-download-mode-3648469/

Samsung's latest update is a serious gut punch to Galaxy power users

Samsung has released a controversial update that disables a tool widely relied upon by power users and service centers.

Android Authority
Igor d'Hossegor est mort 😢

So, I recently saw some quiet discussion about a paper where researchers reverse-engineered and disclosed some attacks against PhotoDNA, the very-super-duper-secret algorithm used by tech megacorps to scan for illegal images.

They didn't make any code public, and so... I did: https://github.com/ArcaneNibble/open-alleged-photodna

A _complete_ reverse-engineering and commented Python reimplementation of the algorithm from publicly-leaked binaries.

This means that studying the algorithm and any potential flaws is now much more accessible.

This took only about two days (once I knew that there even _was_ a leaked binary to compare against), which just goes to again show that security through obscurity never works.

🔁 encouraged

GitHub - ArcaneNibble/open-alleged-photodna: because research belongs to _everybody_

because research belongs to _everybody_. Contribute to ArcaneNibble/open-alleged-photodna development by creating an account on GitHub.

GitHub

After outages, Amazon to make senior engineers sign off on AI-assisted changes

https://arstechnica.com/ai/2026/03/after-outages-amazon-to-make-senior-engineers-sign-off-on-ai-assisted-changes/

AWS has suffered at least two incidents linked to the use of AI coding assistants.

🍿

After outages, Amazon to make senior engineers sign off on AI-assisted changes

AWS has suffered at least two incidents linked to the use of AI coding assistants.

Ars Technica
RT if you want a CLEAR statement about AI from all GNU/Linux distributions and are ready to quit any distribution that is ok with integrating AI slopware.
We Linux users were mocking Microslop, but now we've got ourselves a slopstemd

Is this the first time a major service has removed end-to-end encryption instead of adding it? Why Instagram?

#instagram #socialmedia #privacy #infosec #technology #enshittification