Archive for July 10, 2023

Amazon Prime Day: Last-Minute Deals On Laptop Cases + Tech Accessories From Targus

Posted in Commentary with tags on July 10, 2023 by itnerd

Targus, the number one laptop case brand in the US and Canada and a leader in laptop cases and mobile computing accessories will be offering great deals on laptop bags, cases, docks, and tech accessories, July 11th-12th. Head to the Targus Amazon store for everything you need to carry, connect, and protect the devices that you use every day.

Here’s a preview:

Twitter’s Latest Problem Is That It Failed To Remove Antisemitic Tweets

Posted in Commentary with tags on July 10, 2023 by itnerd

I’ve been saying for a while that Twitter is a toxic swamp of racism and hate. And here’s another example of that brought to you by The Guardian:

Twitter faces a landmark legal challenge after the social media giant failed to remove a series of hate-filled tweets reported by users in what could be a turning point in establishing new standards of scrutiny regarding online antisemitism.

The California-based company, owned since last year by Elon Musk, was alerted to six antisemitic or otherwise racist tweets in January this year by researchers at HateAid, a German organisation that campaigns for human rights in the digital space, and the European Union of Jewish Students EUJS but did not remove them from its platform despite the tweets apparently clearly contravening its own moderation policy.

Four of the tweets denied the Holocaust in explicit terms, one said “blacks should be gassed and sent with space x to Mars”, while a sixth compared Covid vaccination programmes to mass extermination in Nazi death camps. All were reported in January but Twitter ruled that three of the tweets did not violate its guidelines and failed to respond to the other reports, the legal action claims.

HateAid and the EUJS applied earlier this year to a Berlin court to have the tweets deleted, arguing the tweets broke German law and that Twitter had failed to meet contractual obligations to provide a secure and safe environment for its users.

Twitter has received notice of the legal action and has since acted to block some of the offending tweets.

So let’s get this straight:

  • Hate speech that violates Twitter’s own guidelines was found on the platform.
  • When this was brought to their attention the didn’t remove the Tweets in question.
  • Two organization went to court about this.
  • The Tweets were instantly removed after the legal action was started.

On the surface, it sounds like Elon Musk and those who work for him feel that hate speech is fine on Twitter unless someone sues Twitter. In which case it then becomes a problem. That’s a really a bad look for Twitter. Especially seeing as Twitter CEO Linda Yaccarino has called for “hand to hand combat” to get advertisers back onto the platform. Frankly, what advertiser on Earth is going want to be associated with a cesspool of hate which is what Twitter is at present? Stories like this should make advertisers, not to mention Twitter users run in the other direction.

Guest Post: Cybercriminals loot over $600 million from crypto projects in H1 2023

Posted in Commentary with tags on July 10, 2023 by itnerd

A new year brings a new wave of cyber incidents for the crypto sphere. According to the analysis by the Atlas VPN team, various crypto projects and their clients lost a whopping $666,354,302 to 125 cyberattacks in the first half of 2023.  

Nevertheless, compared to the same period last year, crypto-related cyber incidents and losses are declining.  

The Binance Smart Chain (BSC) ecosystem experienced the highest number of incidents, totaling 30, resulting in losses of $25,137,913. Meanwhile, the Ethereum (ETH) ecosystem faced the most significant financial losses, with hackers plundering $265,237,633 from multiple Ethereum-related projects in 29 separate incidents. 

Following closely in terms of losses is the Polygon ecosystem, which endured $122,685,000 in damages caused by only four cyber attacks. Additionally, various crypto wallets suffered losses of $109,200,000. 

In total, 22% of cases were a result of malicious actors exploiting contract vulnerabilities. Furthermore, 14% of the incidents involved social media hacks that were subsequently utilized for social engineering attacks, ultimately leading to the extraction of funds from unsuspecting victims. 

Crypto scams rob holders of nearly $250 million

It is not just the hackers who are to blame for the theft of crypto funds. Sometimes it is the crypto projects themselves. 

In the first half of this year, fraudsters swindled a staggering $248,769,543 from crypto enthusiasts. During the initial quarter, victims lost $9,355,832 to crypto scams, while the losses skyrocketed by 2,459% and reached $239,413,711 in the second quarter. 

Cryptocurrency-related cybercrime is highly appealing to thieves because cryptocurrency payments lack legal protections or government assurances, while chances of recovering lost funds are nearly nonexistent.  

Choosing crypto services carefully, avoiding too-good-to-be-true offers and get-rich-quick schemes, and refraining from responding to unsolicited investment proposals or prompts to log into your crypto wallet and similar communications are just some of the measures that can help people avoid falling victim to crypto-related cyberattacks and scams. 

To read the full article, head over to: https://atlasvpn.com/blog/cybercriminals-loot-over-600-million-from-crypto-projects-in-h1-2023

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The Old Version Of TweetDeck Is Back… But For How Long?

Posted in Commentary with tags on July 10, 2023 by itnerd

Recently, TweetDeck which is a Twitter created tool that many companies relied upon stopped working properly. Then a new version was rolled out along with the news that it would be only for Twitter Blue subscribers. Which of course didn’t go over very well. Today here’s another plot twist. The old version of TweetDeck is back. This was spotted by The Verge:

Overnight, users across Twitter began reporting that the older, and much better, version of TweetDeck has returned along with the free API access that made third party Twitter clients possible. TweetDeck was disabled last week when Twitter abruptly threw up a rate-limiting paywall and killed the legacy APIs that allowed the old version of the feature to function, while third-party apps were banned in January.

An update this morning from Harpy developer Roberto Doering says they switched to the “old v1 API” to get it working again, but they also noted “this doesn’t mean that harpy will be maintained again, seeing as Twitter will most likely shut down access to their legacy api (again) soon and third party apps are still against their TOS.”

To revert to the old version, go into your TweetDeck Account settings, select TweetDeck version, and switch back.

I followed the above instructions to switch my TweetDeck version back with no issues. But the real question is how long will this last as it is likely that Elon Musk will do something else to force people to pay him $8 a month to use TweetDeck. There’s no official announcement on this from what I can see. So whatever is going on, enjoy TweetDeck for as long as you can because it’s not likely to last.