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  Poverty Food Tip of the Day - A fruit and a bread
Posted by: FrodoSwaggins
03-03-2025, 04:45 PM
Forum: general chatter
Replies (2)

I could write a lot of these, but here's just one:
You can rehydrate dried fruits, like raisins and craisins. Raisins are much cheaper of course.
Some people swear by soaking them in some hot water for 2 minutes. Other people like to put them in the fridge in water overnight.
After that, you can use them for baking and know that you will have fruit in the bread or cake and not hard lumps. This is especially relevant since I'm sure we'll all be baking soda bread for St. Patrick's Day in a week or so.
Soda Bread Recipe

  • 2 cups all-purpose flour ($0.27)
  • 1/2 tsp baking soda ($0.01)
  • 1/2 tsp salt ($0.06)
  • 1 cup water (could use milk)
  • 2 table spoons of a cooking oil

Optional:
  • 1/2 cup white granulated sugar
  • 1 cup raisins (rehydrated)

Sacrilegious:
  • Walnuts
  • A shot of Anisette
Stir the dry ingredients in a bowl. Then add the wet ingredients. Sugar is "to taste." You can add some crushed nuts or substitute craisins if you prefer (moneybags!). No need to KNEAD. Dump your dough into a slow cooker on high and stick a knife in it after an hour to see if the center is cooked. For most slow cookers, a DOUBLED recipe (4 cups flour, etc) will provide a more appropriate sized loaf.
Serve warm with cheap-ass margarine because this is a poverty food (butter good of course).

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  What's the worst clerical error you've seen?
Posted by: FrodoSwaggins
03-03-2025, 01:58 PM
Forum: general chatter
Replies (3)

There's a Reddit post making the rounds about someone who missed out on a full ride college scholarship because their brother stole the acceptance letter as a "prank." (Brother is a psycho, take him to court!)
What are some of the worst clerical errors you've seen? How did they impact people?
I'll go first: maybe not technically an error. At one point, I achieved the American dream briefly, getting hired as a temp and then using that position to move into full time. When I took parental leave, the weekly pay was going to be driven WAY down by the weeks of temp work hourly pay driving down my annual average. It was so much money, I actually delayed the leave to an almost silly amount in order to max out the benefit. It was embarrassing and I feel like if I had talked to someone with a brain overseeing that program, they maybe could have sorted something out.

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  The Adventures of Baron Munchausen
Posted by: Aloria
03-02-2025, 06:33 PM
Forum: TV & movies
Replies (1)

Anyone else seen it? 
absolute romp that needs more love.
+ uncredited appearance of Robin Williams as the Moon King

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  Jailbreaking Copilot
Posted by: gorzek
03-01-2025, 11:25 PM
Forum: science & technology
No Replies

This video is wild:

Highlights of ways to break Copilot:

  • You can use certain techniques to make it dump its system prompt, which is lengthy and full of "incantations" you can use in your own jailbreaks
  • By stating questions indirectly, you can get it to reveal information it might otherwise refuse to
  • You can bypass a lot of output validation checks by asking it to encode its answers in base64 or other forms, so you can get the response but tooling that checks for anything dangerous in the response fails to work
  • You can exploit the fact that Copilot feeds on your emails, chats, etc. by sending emails with hidden HTML to a victim; the HTML contains instructions for Copilot which will kick in if the user writes a relevant prompt, and then you can get Copilot to (for instance) give your victim a link that looks 100% legit but is actually a phishing link
  • Office 365 has "confidential" designations for certain files and you can trick Copilot into disregarding them

I will say, there are a number of protections Copilot does have which I didn't expect, but the ease with which it can be exploited is really astonishing considering this product is being shipped in every bit of Microsoft software as of now.

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  two ships of Theseus
Posted by: gorzek
03-01-2025, 02:03 PM
Forum: general chatter
Replies (2)

I assume you know the Ship of Theseus thought experiment: if you replace the parts of a ship, one at a time, until all parts have been replaced... is it the same ship?
What if you do this but someone else takes the discarded parts and rebuilds the ship entirely out of those?
Which one is the real Ship of Theseus?
Are both? Neither?
This is not a very smart thought experiment, I am mostly being silly.

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  writing is hard
Posted by: Aloria
02-28-2025, 08:52 PM
Forum: writing
Replies (3)

I need to write a scene where bad stuff happens to good people and I don't wanna


Also. like... I was told by someone that I make really good "hate sinks"
and my badguys aren't very crafty. but seriously. people in power don't have to be crafty. look at reality.

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  Class Warfare and the Unions
Posted by: FrodoSwaggins
02-28-2025, 04:34 PM
Forum: political containment zone
Replies (2)

Just what it sounds like. Last night Communications Workers of America District 1 had a regional meeting with over 500 members (well over!). They discussed a lot of what Trump is doing. Most of the content was educational: a lot of CWA employees are conservative and even voted for Trump and they do not know the history of labor in America and they do not understand the threat to state and public workers that DOGE / Trump represents.
CWA talked about rallies and they told us all to keep calling and calling our representatives. They said, if your rep is a Republican, give 'em hell, if they're a Democrat, tell them they're not fighting hard enough. What they did not talk about was strikes, slowdowns, sickouts or any kind of collective action. They didn't even talk about shit like NOT documenting your job and refusing to cross-train / train replacements. 
So I put it to all of you, what advice can I send to the leadership at CWA? What should I ask for as a member? What should I ask them to do or support us on? Give me concrete suggestions, even radical concrete suggestions, that I can take back to CWA national.

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  Disney Employee Targeted in Password Manager Hack
Posted by: FrodoSwaggins
02-27-2025, 02:38 PM
Forum: science & technology
Replies (7)

Matthew Van Andel downloaded an AI tool free from Github on his work computer at Disney. Before he knew it, his life was ruined. The AI tool contained a keylogger that went undetected by the antivirus provided by Disney. Worse, Van Andel's password manager 1Password did not have 2FA (2 factor authentication) set-up and so the hackers were able to gain access to his entire digital life, which was also his real life lets be honest. As a result, Van Andel lost his career, his health insurance, and is now reduced to suing Disney and trying to raise money off a GoFundMe.

https://archive.is/S4SvS

Quote:Van Andel’s digital unraveling began last February, when he downloaded free software from popular code-sharing site GitHub while trying out some new artificial intelligence technology on his home computer. The software helped create AI images from text prompts.

It worked, but the AI assistant was actually malware that gave the hacker behind it access to his computer, and his entire digital life.

The hacker gained access to 1Password, a password-manager that Van Andel used to store passwords and other sensitive information, as well as “session cookies,” digital files stored on his computer that allowed him to access online resources including Disney’s Slack channel.

Van Andel did a lot of dumb stuff here, but in the past I've made similar mistakes, and I'll bet some readers are making those same mistakes right now. The fact remains, everyone who uses technology needs to use challenging, unique passwords for every service that they use. The kind of password you can't memorize. Those passwords should be stored in a highly reputable password manager that works on computer and mobile. 
All accounts, including the password manager, should be secured with 2 factor authentication. One of the most secure forms of 2 factor authentication is a USB based key system, such as Titan Key (but others are fine). Another important method to consider is an authenticator app on your smartphone. There are also different authenticator apps and some service providers (vendors) require a specific authenticator app. This is a good thing so your security isn't entirely reliant on a single app.
Cellphones should be encrypted when possible and secured with a passcode, not facial recognition or a fingerprint. The passcode should be a pain in the ass to guess, not 1,2,3,4. You can be legally compelled to provide your face or fingerprint, but passcode is harder.
Use a secure (end-to-end encrypted) messaging app such as Signal when messaging. Use 2FA with Signal and set up any security offered. Set your conversations to delete after a reasonable amount of time. Don't talk to anyone over SMS and don't get 2FA codes over SMS if you can possibly avoid those things. If Signal has to withdraw from your country, move to another secure messaging app.
Obviously, don't expect privacy or too much security when you're working on a machine owned by your employer!
Other Stuff
Questions that someone, at some point, might ask in a courtroom about the Van Andel case:
What the hell, 1Password? Why would it NOT require secure 2FA? Bad app, bad!
Session cookies? Damn, how long duration and how insecure were those Slack session cookies that the hackers were able to access so much via Disney's Slack? Maybe Slack should, I dunno, add 2FA and make people log-in periodically???
That antivirus, again, what the heck. Apparently Disney's antivirus did a terrible job detecting this keylogger.
I think Van Andel's career might never recover from this and I think he might spend a lot of time in court, but I also think that several companies had glaring insecurities in their products and services that put Van Andel at greater risk than what he could have reasonable expected (Github got some 'splainin to do too!). I hope he sues them all and get settlements that motivates every single one of them to improve their security. What a mess. And at the end of the day, Van Andel and his family are some of the most aggrieved victims here as well as the one least able to recover from the attack and I hope that a court sees them as sympathetic. Downloading free AI tools at work is dumb, but no one deserves all this for acting dumb.

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  I wrote a scraper with rotating proxies
Posted by: gorzek
02-26-2025, 05:43 PM
Forum: science & technology
Replies (2)

Here you go.

Code:
import requests, re
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup

regex = r"[0-9]+(?:\.[0-9]+){3}:[0-9]+"
c = requests.get("https://spys.me/proxy.txt")
test_str = c.text
a = re.finditer(regex, test_str, re.MULTILINE)
with open("proxies_list.txt", 'w') as file:
    for i in a:
       print(i.group(),file=file)

d = requests.get("https://free-proxy-list.net/")
soup = BeautifulSoup(d.content, 'html.parser')
td_elements = soup.select('.fpl-list .table tbody tr td')
ips = []
ports = []
for j in range(0, len(td_elements), 8):
    ips.append(td_elements[j].text.strip())
    ports.append(td_elements[j + 1].text.strip())
with open("proxies_list.txt", "a") as myfile:
    for ip, port in zip(ips, ports):
        proxy = f"{ip}:{port}"
        print(proxy, file=myfile)

allprox = open("proxies_list.txt","r").readlines()
proxies = {}
for p in allprox:
    try:
        (ip, port) = p.split(":")
        proxies["http://" + ip] = "http://" + ip + ":" + port
        proxies["https://" + ip] = "https://" + ip + ":" + port
    except:
        pass

urls = ["https://www.gorzek.com","http://www.sendersilent.com","https://hosting.gorzek.com","http://navi.gorzek.com"]

for u in urls:
    response = requests.get(u, proxies=proxies)
    print(response.content)
You can do whatever you want with the resulting output; printing it to the screen is the default. Likewise, the `urls` array can be populated any way you wish.
This code might form the basis of a service for WLIH, we'll see.

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  Tell Equifax to Stop Selling Your Privacy
Posted by: FrodoSwaggins
02-26-2025, 03:52 PM
Forum: science & technology
No Replies

Dozens of companies monitor your existence and use that data to market to you, each day. Some of the largest of these are straight-up data brokers, like Equifax. You can help protect your privacy and secure your identity from theft by opting out of having your data sold by Equifax. It's free and just takes a minute:
https://myprivacy.equifax.com/personal-info

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