😂😂
police freaking out at iPhones stored for forensic examination mysteriously rebooting themselves. This makes brute forcing much harder. Cops hypothesize Apple pushed an update that tells nearby iPhones to reboot if not on phone network
@th3j35t3r neat hadn't seen this before
@AnnetteTRemain expand the post should make it readable
Failing that long press, right click, and open image up in new tab then you can zoom in << CoSo needs to be on web interface on mobile interface via browser, or mobile PWA, long press image itself and "open in chrome" then you can zoom in also 👍
NOT the phone app - the app your limited on doing these things & other things its why i use a PWA
Its true, Elon, Harris had 83 billionaires backing her, vs 52 billionaires supporting Trump.
That said its not the number of billionaires that matter its who they billionaires are that is the issue really.....
turns out Russia has been providing targeting data for the Houthis' attacks on merchant vessels.
That makes Russia an active participant in the Houthis' campaign against Western-linked shipping.
Jus a heads up
Foreign Policy >> Overall, we rate Foreign Policy News Left biased due to their story selection that favors the left and mixed factually due to poor (lack of) sourcing.
HellZaPoppin
“Popularised by the 1938 theatre musical Hellzapoppin’, and by the 1941 film Hellzapoppin’ based on the former, the one-word form hellzapoppin’ represents a colloquial pronunciation of the phrase hell’s a poppin’…The phrase hell’s a poppin’, and its variants, mean events are unfolding in a chaotic manner; a state of confusion and disarray is taking hold.”
From the interesting Wordhistories site:
/nosanitize
Hey im a NED not all NED's are stoopid dumb fuckas 😂😂
With a nice glesga kiss to send ya on yer way laddie 🤪
The FBI said in its advisory that it had seen several public posts made by known cybercriminals over 2023 and 2024, claiming access to email addresses used by U.S. law enforcement and some foreign governments
The advisory said that the cybercriminals were successful in masquerading as law enforcement by using compromised police accounts to send emails to companies requesting user data
The FBI’s public notice filed this week is a rare admission from the federal government about the threat from fraudulent emergency data requests
https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/25281365-fbi-ic3-notice-241104
abuse of emergency data requests is not new, and has been widely reported
in recent years
Law enforcement send "emergency" requests to tech giants when they believe it's necessary to stop an immediate threat. Hackers are taking advantage of that - The problem, as TechCrunch first reported, is that these requests are often sent to the tech giants through specific email addresses. And of course, persistent hackers are pretty good at breaking into email accounts, especially ones that often aren’t two-factor secured—but even those are penetrable through hacks like SIM swapping
@Beanc lol
Yeah i get that when some notifications from my smartphone get pushed to my Chromebook its like 1997 & 1975
Stop messing with the time continuum *wags finga* 😆
Meanwhile:
The US government has brought charges against an Iranian man in connection with an alleged plot to assassinate Donald Trump before he was elected the next president.
criminal complaint filed in Manhattan court, prosecutors allege that an official in Iran’s Revolutionary Guard directed Mr Shakeri in September to devise a plan to surveil and kill Trump
The US government said Mr Shakeri has not been arrested and is believed to be in Iran.
-- bbc news
E = Mc2 - Energy Milk Coffee
Fáilte Abhaile 🏴 “a nod’s as guid as a wink tae a blind horse”
ta be aff yer heid helps