Day 38 of #100DaysOfHacking
Completed Day 16 of the tryhackme advent calendar.
I'm just starting out. He/him.
Day 38 of #100DaysOfHacking
Completed Day 16 of the tryhackme advent calendar.
Catching up.
Days 34, 35, 36 and 37 of #100DaysOfHacking
Completed Days 09, 13, 14, 15 of the tryhackme advent calendar.
If for whatever reason you never wish to interact with #Threads, you can personally block it for your account. This hides all posts and profiles from Threads, prevents anyone from Threads from following you, and stops your posts from being delivered to or fetched by Threads. Simply click the "Block domain threads.net" option on any Threads profile or post you see in Mastodon.
Days 31, 32, 33 of #100DaysOfHacking
Completed Days 03, 04 and 05 of the tryhackme advent calendar.
Day 31 of #100DaysOfHacking
Completed Day 02 of the tryhackme advent calendar.
Day 30 of #100DaysOfHacking
Completed today's task of the tryhackme advent calendar.
I poured root beer in a square glass. Now I just have beer.
It's #LongCovidAwarenessDay so here's my story...
Our entire family contracted Covid in April 2020. The kids were asymptomatic, my partner had a fever for 24 hours, and I spent the next 6 weeks in bed.
I spent the better part of the next year unable to walk more than a few city blocks. My hair started falling out.
Come early 2022, the impact of my long-term symptoms started to catch up. They were repeatedly dismissed as anxiety, stress, or depression. In reality...
1/
@zodmagus Congratulations!
Looks like Elon’s jet is enroute to the World Cup. 👀
This week, LastPass, and its parent company GoTo, both published blog posts about their recent data breach: http://tcrn.ch/3ucMvBx
But if you search for GoTo's blog post in Google, you won't find it, because GoTo hid its breach notice from search engines using "noindex" code.
Please boost if you’re still masking indoors (in public places)
Day 010 of #100DaysOfHacking
Had a look at last year's tryhackme advent calender in preparation for this year's.
After two years of negotiations with Microsoft, the joint committee of the German federal data protection authority and 17 state regulators (DSK) published a devastating statement that essentially says that organizations currently cannot use MS365 in a lawful way under the GDPR.
Well this blew up.
To be clear, the DSK's statement is an assessment, not an enforcement decision. But what's stopping German regulators from enforcement?
Problem is that MS365 is unavoidable in many areas. I think this requires a coordinated political effort at the EU level.