homepage | https://mohamedation.com |
homepage | https://mohamedation.com |
maybe they are under DDOS?
@wordpress
Now imagine if it was the other way
U.S. secretly embeds trackers in AI chip shipments bound for China
https://techstartups.com/2025/08/13/u-s-secretly-embeds-trackers-in-ai-chip-shipments-bound-for-china-reports
The U.S. is taking its AI chip export crackdown to a new level — hiding location trackers inside select shipments to catch them before they slip into China’s hands. Two people with direct knowledge of the tactic told Reuters the devices are being quietly placed in targeted loads of advanced chips at high risk of
The recent changes in internet censorship are 'childish' and should be stopped.
tracking everyone online in the name of protecting kids is not right.
YouTube backlash begins: “Why is AI combing through every single video I watch?”
https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2025/08/50k-youtubers-rage-against-ai-spying-that-could-expose-identities
you can also use my tool to check your passwords using @haveibeenpwned DB
in the past few months, there were a lot of stealer logs lists going around and mostly they are made from each other..not a bad practice to check your passwords and also check @haveibeenpwned
In June 2025, headlines erupted over a "16 billion password" breach. In reality, the dataset was a compilation of publicly accessible stealer logs, mostly repurposed from older leaks, with only a small portion of genuinely new material. HIBP received 2.7B rows containing 109M unique email addresses, which was subsequently added to the service under the name "Data Troll". The websites the stealer logs were captured against are searchable via the HIBP dashboard.
in the past few months, there were a lot of stealer logs lists going around and mostly they are made from each other..not a bad practice to check your passwords and also check @haveibeenpwned
https://haveibeenpwned.com/Breach/DataTrollStealerLogs
you can also use my tool to check your passwords using @haveibeenpwned DB
In June 2025, headlines erupted over a "16 billion password" breach. In reality, the dataset was a compilation of publicly accessible stealer logs, mostly repurposed from older leaks, with only a small portion of genuinely new material. HIBP received 2.7B rows containing 109M unique email addresses, which was subsequently added to the service under the name "Data Troll". The websites the stealer logs were captured against are searchable via the HIBP dashboard.