Larry Staples

@lstaples
198 Followers
461 Following
669 Posts
Came to #Japan in 1984 to study 日本語 @ ICU. Been working in Japan IT and telecommunications since then. Favorites are not endorsements.
Websitehttps://lstaples.sdf.org
GitHubhttps://github.com/lstaples3

Last Friday, we explored the music of vintage video games and the magic of astonishment! Thank you to our speakers and everyone who came out.

Don't miss our next Nerd Nite on Friday, April 17!

https://tokyo.nerdnite.com/

#music #retrogaming #magic #nerdnite

@alanb Cory Doctorow? Cool!
Lanterns are on along the Meguro River.
#japan #sakura #目黒区 #中目黒

I’m pleased to announce several updates to VoiceOver support in Mona 7.

In the latest app update, VoiceOver users can now opt in to receive in-app timeline update notifications, and use Column View on iPad and Mac.

An upcoming update will introduce a new VoiceOver feature called SuperVision, designed to help VoiceOver users check a lot more posts on a single screen while reducing mobile data usage.

Stay tuned, and have a great day!

Back in the middle-late 1970s, I attended one of the first USENIX conferences, held at Columbia University in NYC. This was not a fancy affair, a guy from the Univ. of Texas and I shared a dorm room for housing during the event. In our spare time, we decided to see the World Trade Center. At that point, both towers were essentially complete, but (I believe) the massive antenna array on the North Tower was still under construction, at least partly. The observation facilities were in the South Tower. We took the escalator up a floor or two, paid a small free, and rode the express elevator -- no car changes -- to the top. The outside observation deck was closed due to wind, but an entire floor just below was the inside observation area. You don't realize until you're in there how closely spaced the exterior beams were -- and so how narrow were the glass windows, that had decals on them identifying the various sights.

Two events occurred on that visit that still give me chills today. First, I made the offhand comment that I didn't see how the building would hold up if the exterior framework were breached -- that's all there was, the exterior frame and the inner core -- no support pillars. I said something like, "If anything happened to the outer frame, I don't see how this building wouldn't collapse like a stack of records on a record changer (look it up, kids). The other event. Suddenly there was a bell ringing or buzzer buzzing -- I don't remember which, and the entire wide area of the floor was closed off by a massive steel barrier. I had no idea where it came from, and neither did anyone else. We seemed to be trapped. Nobody had a clue what to do. It was, frankly, damned scary. It turned out that there was a false fire alarm, and those massive barriers were automatic fire doors. Eventually the fire department came, the doors were opened, and we were all able to take the elevator back down.

That was my one visit to the World Trade Center towers. All these years later, I still occasionally have nightmares about it.

As JR East will raise fares on Saturday, Keio (which runs parallel to the Chuo Line) has distributed this advert to homes in the area, emphasising how "reasonable" its fares are.

While we build robust technical safeguards, user vigilance is ultimately the best defense against phishing. We will continue to work on mitigating these risks via interface design and signposting throughout the app. In the meantime, please stay alert, and never share your SMS verification code or Signal PIN with anyone.

https://support.signal.org/hc/en-us/articles/9932566320410-Staying-Safe-from-Phishing-Scams-and-Impersonation

Staying Safe from Phishing, Scams, and Impersonation

We provide a privacy-first, end-to-end encrypted (E2EE) messaging and calling platform designed so only you and your intended recipients can communicate securely. Even with strong encryption, attac...

Signal Support

To protect people from such phishing, Signal actively warns users against sharing their SMS code and PIN.

We also want to emphasize that Signal Support will *never* initiate contact via in-app messages, SMS, or social media to ask for your verification code or PIN. If anyone asks for any Signal related code, it is a scam. We make this clear when users receive their SMS code during initial signup.

These attacks, like all phishing, rely on social engineering. Attackers impersonate trusted contacts or services (such as the non-existent “Signal Support Bot”) to trick victims into handing over their login credentials or other information. To help prevent this, remember that your Signal SMS verification code is only ever needed when you are first signing up for the Signal app.

We are aware of recent reports regarding targeted phishing attacks that have resulted in account takeovers of some Signal users, including government officials and journalists. We take this very seriously.

To be clear: Signal’s encryption and infrastructure have not been compromised and remain robust. These attacks were executed via sophisticated phishing campaigns, designed to trick users into sharing information – SMS codes and/or Signal PIN – to gain access to users’ accounts.