Brian Sniffen

216 Followers
451 Following
200 Posts

The Murderbot Diaries by @marthawells audiobooks are in a Humble Bundle!!!! Along with some other authors that I'm looking forward to listening to, given the company they're in.

https://www.humblebundle.com/books/marthawells-agriddle-and-more-audiobooks-books

Martha Wells, A.G. Riddle, and More Audiobooks from Recorded Books

We’ve teamed up with Recorded Books for our newest bundle. Get books like Martha Wells’ The Murderbot Diaries series & A.G. Riddle’s The Long Winter trilogy.

Humble Bundle
A lot could be said about this, but note how the GOP once again has no pretense to any form of responsible governing. In terms of the federal deficit—the thing they pretended to care about—this is a hodgepodge of bad policy ideas that will have a trivial impact on federal debt.
@jik wait what? I can only sign one petition to get someone on the presidential ballot?
A draft RFC by Stephen Farrell, Farzaneh Badli, Bruce Schneier, and myself: "Reflections on ten years past the Snowden revelations": https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-farrell-tenyearsafter-00.txt

I guess I should write something to commemorate the day Europe became civilized?

So: the Holocaust was not a singular event. The history of Western culture is a series of genocides from the Rhineland Massacres to Treblinka. When people talk about retvrning to tradition, this is what they mean. The EU, human rights courts, and other postwar regime elements that populists hate exist in rejection of that millennium of savagery. And what they hate the most is, this new regime has been successful.

I know I'm a broken record on this, but I so wish Mastodon had a simple mechanism similar to quote-retweeting.

For me a lot of the fun of Twitter is using someone else's thought as a jumping point for starting a conversation with mutuals/followers.

Direct-replying is great if you want to join a conversation in someone else's community, but that's not always what I want to do.

'Unlike those in Western democracies, China’s intelligence services are not held to account by independent political bodies or the public, nor are they subject to the rule of law. Instead, the Chinese government fuses together a “whole of society” approach for collecting intelligence. This sets it apart from anything undertaken by Western governments. Chinese intelligence and commerce are integrated in ways without comparison in the West. Contrary to what may be thought, the U.S. government does not conduct industrial espionage to advantage U.S. businesses. In China, by contrast, thanks to successive national security legislation passed under President Xi Jinping, Chinese businesses are required to work with its intelligence services whenever requested to do so. They are effectively silent partners in Chinese commerce with the outside world.

'Another difference between Chinese intelligence and Western powers concerns what those in the spy world call ubiquitous technical surveillance. Facial recognition, phone apps, and CCTV all make China an infinitely harder target for Western agencies to collect intelligence on than Chinese services’ targets in open Western democracies. A fundamental asymmetry thus exists in the shadowy intelligence battles between China and the West.

'The Cold War offers two warnings. First, Chinese spies are real in the same way Soviet agents were real. An uncomfortable public policy conversation is urgently needed about the nature of Chinese students, academics, and businesspeople—some of whom may have malign intentions—as well as talent programs and cultural outreach programs in the United States. But that does not mean that Americans who happen to be of Chinese heritage are spies, any more so than left-leaning Americans were Soviet agents. [100%.]

'Second, sunlight is the best disinfectant. The U.S. government must be transparent about its knowledge of Chinese intelligence. If such information is not forthcoming—and scrutinized, debated, and challenged—there is a real prospect of another McCarthyite witch hunt. Today, Chinese Americans are often the victims of the Chinese government and its intelligence services. Finding the balance between security and civil liberties is our challenge ahead. China will continue to spy, using all means available—balloons, businesses, and bytes. We need to determine what trade-offs we are willing to put up with between security and civil liberties'. [100%.]
https://foreignpolicy.com/2023/03/28/china-has-been-waging-a-decades-long-all-out-spy-war/

China Has Been Waging a Decades-Long, All-Out Spy War on the United States

While the West was distracted, the Chinese government began an intelligence assault that never stopped.

Foreign Policy
fun with global variables.... #meme

Of the folks I interacted with on the bird site, I'm noticing these migration patterns:

* #security peeps have mostly moved over here, primarily to infosec.exchange and a few to hachyderm or self-hosting
* dev & #FOSS folks have migrated en masse, primarily to hachyderm and self-hosting
* science fiction friends have mostly made the jump
* journalists are a mix - lots of folks cross-posting and lots still posting "write-only" over there, but lots still engaging too
* my #LGBTQ peeps are active in both places
* disability advocacy friends are still over there; a few #ADHD peeps are over here
* DEI type folks have depressingly mostly not moved here, but to LinkedIn
* founders & VCs have almost entirely _not_ moved
* housing/urbanist types mostly haven't moved, especially Canadians

Curious how that lines up with what others are seeing, especially among groups I haven't listed (those happen to be the groups I personally interact with – curious about your personal equivalents!)

#twittermigration #fediverse

@huitema @goldbe same reason I like really bad MFA—not shareable—and love slightly better MFA—not phishable. TLS private keys shouldn’t be in the heap with network code. Next, they shouldn’t be on disk or in the cpu. One step at a time. :)