I think he's referring to certain enterprise switches and other networking gear that has basically zero support for automation.
For me personally, I would be replacing that equipment but some businesses would rather pay a few hundred bucks every year + manpower to replace the certs than a few thousand once to replace the equipment.
Maybe he was planning to hide until trump got back, or wanted to do his own investigation. Either way as a former trump supporter, we can't expect him to use his brain (even before it ended up scattered in the hedges).
I generally agree with the sentiment but don't pull by latest, or at the very least don't expect every new version to work without issue.
Most projects are very well behaved as you say but they still need to upgrade major versions now and again that contains breaking charges.
I spebt an afternoon putting my compose files into git, setting up a simple CI pipeline and use renovate to automatically create PR's when things update. Now all my services are pinned to specific versions and when there's an update, I get a PR to make the change along with a nice change log telling me what's actually changed.
It's a little more effort but things don't suddenly break any more. Highly recommend this approach.
The main argument against bsky is that they're still holding all of your data, unless you self host your own server.
I don't actually see how Lemmy is much different. Most users are not self hosting on Lemmy either, you're trusting your data to a 3rd party. The main difference seems to be that there's much more centralisation on bsky.
I think it's entirely reasonable to be wary of any service, be ready to delete your account if it goes to shit or whatever it is you need to do to feel safe.
But right now, I like blue sky. I've had far more positive interactions on there than I ever had on twitter (even before musk took it over), the lists feature that lets you pre-emptively block entire swathes of dickheads is a game changer (I just block one group, anyone Maga) and I'm having a good time.
I expect I'll get downvoted for this but honestly I don't care, the world has gone to shit far too much for me to give a crap about what internet strangers think over my own health and wellbeing and right now I'm having a good time and will not apologise for it.
Bit of a snooze fest if I'm honest. I was hoping we'd get more screen time with Genesys at some point but this was a bit flat and boring. It also seems to counter her character, an otherwise brilliant cadet that's acing it but does really obviously dumb shit? Didn't quite buy it.
The whole episode was quite predictable, this might possibly be my least favourite episode so far.
I think this is quite a naive perspective on banks.
You don't want them making investments, yet you also don't want to pay fees? How is that supposed to work? Do you want to pay for your banking services directly?
Of course he's quadrupling down and he'll keep on doubling down again and again because that's the only way he stays out of prison and it's the only way MAGA doesn't collapse, so everyone around him will continue to back him.
The only way this will end is if he dies or a bunch of folks finally use the second amendment right they've been so precious about that they let hundreds of school kids die each year for.
I actually think it will collapse the government, I just don't think that'll be a bad thing. The whole fucking thing shuts down all the time as it is, what's a few more weeks while they guillotine a bunch of child rapists? Seems like time well spent to me.
We had a video-conference and numerous email exchanges with Bitwarden. At the time of writing, they are well advanced in deploying mitigations for our attacks: BW01, BW03, BW11, BW12 were addressed, the minimum KDF iteration count for BW07 is now 5000, and their roadmap includes completely removing CBC-only encryption, enforcing per-item keys and changing the vault format for integrity. On 22.12.25 they shared with us a draft for a signed organisation membership scheme, which would resolve BW08 and BW09. At our request, to maintain anonymity, they have not yet credited us publicly for the disclosure, but plan to do so.
I didn't look at the response to other Password managers, but the gist here is that the article is overblowing the paper by quite a bit and the majority of the "issues" discovered are either already fixed, or active design decisions.
Jellyfin is a fork of emby (from when it went closed source), so that makes sense. They have diverged quite a bit but seems the Auth hasn't changed enough.
HDD prices have been creeping up for a while now. I noticed this as I was looking to add more storage to my server, checked prices late last year, figured I'd hold off a bit longer, checked again a few weeks ago and they were much higher across the board. Also a lot less stock for higher capacities. Took the plunge, bought enough storage to get me through the next few years.
Glad I did as the drives I bought have continued going up in price. This article just confirms it for me.
I think he's referring to certain enterprise switches and other networking gear that has basically zero support for automation.
For me personally, I would be replacing that equipment but some businesses would rather pay a few hundred bucks every year + manpower to replace the certs than a few thousand once to replace the equipment.