#Florida Is Fighting to Feed Starving #Manatees This Winter - https://www.wired.com/story/florida-is-fighting-to-feed-starving-manatees-this-winter/ poor manatees, humankind to blame, as usual....
RT @KarrieUrbanist
Until I read this @ad_mastro story, I had no idea where Vornado, the real estate company, got its name, or its connection to Two Guys (a regular destination of my childhood), or its role in the demise of Toys R Us. https://www.thebulwark.com/the-curious-case-of-a-toys-r-us-killer/
Charity Tied to Supreme Court Offers Donors Access to the Justices
"the Supreme Court Historical Society is ostensibly independent of the judicial branch of government, but...
over the years the society has become a vehicle for those seeking access to... [SCOTUS]
The justices attend the society’s annual black-tie dinner soirees, where they mingle with donors & thank them for their generosity... more than $23 million over the last two decades."
~https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/30/us/politics/supreme-court-historical-society-donors-justices.html
QAnon and conspiratorial thinking have gained traction in certain yoga and wellness circles.
Here's how one yoga teacher's story — and path to radicalization — can help shed light on the "wellness to QAnon" pipeline.
https://n.pr/3QoVfz3
@jpanzer I admittedly have my own nuanced views on certain gun legislation proposals as well as what should be done to address gun violence, but that's beside the because Roberts is very much an obstructionist fool standing in the way of progress on addressing both gun violence and the deeper societal issues that massively worsen both it and many, many other things.
It's one thing to give a well-intentioned but ineffective solution to a problem. It's another to insist on no solution being allowed except for one's own crowd. Roberts is doing the latter.
Say, you see someone being calling off due their political inclination.
You can't report that. The report now requires that the attacker must be attacking someone's identity (religion, sexual inclination, whatever), but political inclination is not identity, so...
@RaeGun It's around this point where my attempts to understand how that mob of frothing extreme right wing troglodytes even think fall flat.
@RaeGun Disclose.tv recently tweeted a link to a **bullshit** article claiming most Mastodon users are pedophiles. The comments section was predictably full of frothing right wingers testing out their newest smear...
I've been using #Twitter significantly less recently, and only to read stuff others have tweeted (not that I was ever a prolific poster anyway).
The one thing that really stands out, however, is just how toxic that place was. I didn't really notice until I left... It was so common that I became almost immune to it, like it was normal or to be expected.
Whether it was posts about #infosec or #Brexit or #Covid or Greta Thunberg... Tweets just constantly seemed so argumentative and intentionally divisive. It's such a more pleasant experience overall here on Mastodon!
‘Our identity lies in these songs’: saving the music of #India’s Biate - https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/jan/03/forgotten-songs-collective-saving-music-biate-indian-hill-tribe-global-audience so much wonderful culture is being lost around the world; more must be done to capture it before it is too late... #ethnomusic
In a democracy, the private depends on the public.
Businesses depend on public resources: roads, bridges, highways, sewers, a water supply, airports and air traffic control, a patent office, public education for your employees, public health, the electric grid, the satellite communications, the internet, and more.
Individuals depend on clean air, water, safe food, public safety, access to education and health care, housing, employment ...
Without such public resources, you are not free.
RT @LionHirth@twitter.com
One of my all-time favorites:
The united German electric power industry claiming that renewables "even in the long term can't supply more than 4% of Germany's power needs."
That was in 1993, when renewables stood at, well, 4%.
We reached 50% in 2022.
🐦🔗: https://twitter.com/LionHirth/status/1610003200958156800
Last week, I discovered a public Amazon S3 bucket belonging to a French bank that contained approximately 16GB of data (122 339 files), including static assets such as CSS, JavaScript, and images, as well as official documents, schema, unverified IBANs and API documentation.
While the bucket was intentionally left open, the bank's security team promptly responded to my report and corrected the issue.
However, there are several potential risks associated with leaving an Amazon S3 bucket open to the public.
By knowing the name of the bucket, I was able to download its entire contents, potentially gain access to sensitive information (naming convention, API endpoints), and even deduce the bank's AWS Account ID (prod?) and AWS Organization ID.
In today's AWS Security landscape, it is generally considered best practice to use a CloudFront distribution to expose static files rather than leaving S3 buckets open to the public.
As a fun side note, I discovered that Google was also indexing the bucket's contents.
Despite the security lapse, the bank was grateful for my report and even rewarded me with a $10 credit as a customer.
Overall, it was a reminder that security is an ongoing effort, and we should all be vigilant in protecting our assets.
I started a new account on Twitter to see what would happen. I made no posts and followed 8 others; weather, traffic, local police and news. My time line is NOTHING but right wing hate, absolutely nothing else. #Twitter #elonmusk #rightwinghate
Mathematics Ph.D. Likes hanging out with almost everyone regardless of political views or anything else.
Akkoma: @ML2