BrikoX
Have strong opinions, but welcome all civil discussions.
Mastodon: @[email protected]
- 177 Posts
- 33 Comments
BrikoX@lemmy.zipto News@lemmy.world•'Wildly underprepared’: National Guard troops seen sleeping on floors in exclusive photosEnglish151·2 months agoThey are not getting paid anything in this case. Usually they get paid by the state when doing work there, but since they were federalized they are under federal juridistion now and won’t get paid by the state for deployment. And Trump isn’t providing federal funds, hence them sleeping on the floor, having to pay for food themselves, using their own equipment.
BrikoX@lemmy.zipto Technology@lemmy.world•lemm.ee is shutting down at the end of this monthEnglish11·3 months agoGreat admin team, public finances, reasonable rules, good defederation policy, data is hosted in the EU.
BrikoX@lemmy.zipto Technology@lemmy.world•lemm.ee is shutting down at the end of this monthEnglish28·3 months agolemmy.zip would be my recommendation.
BrikoX@lemmy.zipto News@lemmy.world•Luigi Mangione accepts $300K in donations for legal defense in murder caseEnglish132·6 months agoHow many of them were a rich white dude? That’s the difference.
BrikoX@lemmy.zipOPto Cybersecurity@sh.itjust.works•The US proposes rules to make healthcare data more secureEnglish11·8 months agoDefinitely. Once the company reach certain level of annual turnover it must implement A-Z security measures or be fined out of existence would be great. I even go as far as making it personal liability for upper management if they deliberately try to circumvent those requirements.
BrikoX@lemmy.zipOPto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Do you know any independent written news sources?English1·9 months agoMost journalists are still sitting on Twitter or those that got kick out from Twitter are on Nazi infested Substack.
BrikoX@lemmy.zipto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Postiz (v1.6.6) - open-source social media scheduling toolEnglish11·10 months agoSince you deleted your post on [email protected], reposting my comment.
Another AI project that will probably be dead in a few months. Also open core not open source as many of the features are not available via self-hosted version.
Self-hosted version which source is available and hosted-version which is not public, are not the same. Or at the very least, planned to not be the same by your own admission as you talked publically about planning on adding paid-only features to hosted version.
Take out “AI features” and you are left with nothing, so yeah, AI project… It also relies on proprietary AI models that you don’t own, so it can stop working at any point and that would be out of your control.
BrikoX@lemmy.zipto Technology@lemmy.world•EU considers calculating X fines by including revenue from Musk’s other firmsEnglish1·10 months agoI love how you quoted all the parts expect the one that mentions where for this to even apply the person have to misuse corporate assets in the first place. Follow the law, and you are good in the EU, no matter which size business you are.
If Elon Musk’s rights as a company owner can be violated, who says yours can’t?
Here you go again. If they decide to go through with it, no Musk rights will be violated, there is extensive legal precedent in the EU that covers this.
BrikoX@lemmy.zipto Technology@lemmy.world•EU considers calculating X fines by including revenue from Musk’s other firmsEnglish3·10 months agoIt can’t be irrelevant as it’s the primary factor in deciding if the fine will even be brought. But ignoring that, there are clear limits. This would only apply to cases where corporate assets were used as personal ones. Hence, the limitation to private companies that have sole owners.
And you talk like this is some novel never heard of approach. Personal liability applies to many actions under the law, just corporations managed to lobby it down for themselves. And your scaremongering of small family business becoming some governments targets are unfounded.
BrikoX@lemmy.zipto Technology@lemmy.world•EU considers calculating X fines by including revenue from Musk’s other firmsEnglish6·10 months ago<…> your family’s bakery or your neighbor’s paralegal office.
Are not subject to DSA. For the most part DSA only covers companies which have more than 45 million users in the European Union.
BrikoX@lemmy.zipOPto Cybersecurity@sh.itjust.works•1 bug, $50,000+ in bounties, how Zendesk intentionally left a backdoor in hundreds of Fortune 500 companiesEnglish7·11 months agoThat looks to be a troll. ZendeskTeam account was created 1 hour ago and is not part of the org.
But the help article linked is pathetic.
BrikoX@lemmy.zipOPto Game Development@programming.dev•The new Unity 6 game engine demo looks spectacular but is it enough to convince developers to return?English161·11 months agoThere are non-FOSS alternatives to Unity. For tinkerers, sure, it doesn’t matter. But if you plan on releasing a product, the licensing of your engine starts to matter a lot more. The question should really be, is there trust left in Unity? Even using a less powerful or more expensive engine, might be a better option across your product lifetime, depending on the licensing terms or them being changed retroactively (that really should be fucking illegal, but oh well).
Don’t take this as an insult, but you really need to come back when there is an independent audit that confirms the claims. Verifying cryptography is not something even a tech-savvy person can do, even if the source code is available.
BrikoX@lemmy.zipOPto Cybersecurity@sh.itjust.works•North Korean hackers target Python devs with malware disguised as coding tests — hack has been underway for a yearEnglish2·11 months agoI noticed this today too, no idea what is going on. Need to reach out to the instance admin, since it’s only happening on my instance as far as I can see.
BrikoX@lemmy.zipto World News@lemmy.world•How a Single Family Was Shot Dead on a Street in GazaEnglish3·1 year agoICC can’t impose death penalty as it’s against international human rights law.
BrikoX@lemmy.zipOPto Cybersecurity@sh.itjust.works•Found: 280 Android apps that use OCR to steal cryptocurrency credentialsEnglish20·1 year agoMcAfee blog offers some more details: https://www.mcafee.com/blogs/other-blogs/mcafee-labs/new-android-spyagent-campaign-steals-crypto-credentials-via-image-recognition/
Added to the post body.
There were warrants issued on March 25 to him and his brother, which were ignored.
Full of them in US equipment though.