On 1/15/20 4:03 PM, Don Tai wrote:
These social engineering fraud methods are increasingly sophisticated.
Why break into your house when you can do the same from the comfort of
North Korea/China/wherever and a bit of location misdirection? I find
these social engineering phishing methods quite
These social engineering fraud methods are increasingly sophisticated. Why
break into your house when you can do the same from the comfort of North
Korea/China/wherever and a bit of location misdirection? I find these
social engineering phishing methods quite fascinating. These big companies
resell
On 1/15/20 3:46 PM, Peter King via talk wrote:
On Wed, Jan 15, 2020 at 03:00:36PM -0500, Alvin Starr via talk wrote:
When I order something from Amazon not long after I get emails from various
phisherpeople claiming to be UPS or some other delivery company.
The messages are coming through an o
On Wed, Jan 15, 2020 at 03:00:36PM -0500, Alvin Starr via talk wrote:
> When I order something from Amazon not long after I get emails from various
> phisherpeople claiming to be UPS or some other delivery company.
> The messages are coming through an old email address that is badly spam
> filter
It is also possible that you have researched the product from a browser and
the browser is giving this info away, or that Google is leaking this search
info to others. There are many ways ocmpanies could track your intentions!
Try searching google from an anonymous browser, unconnected to your ema
On Wed, Jan 15, 2020 at 03:00:36PM -0500, Alvin Starr via talk wrote:
> When I order something from Amazon not long after I get emails from various
> phisherpeople claiming to be UPS or some other delivery company.
> The messages are coming through an old email address that is badly spam
> filtere
When I order something from Amazon not long after I get emails from
various phisherpeople claiming to be UPS or some other delivery company.
The messages are coming through an old email address that is badly spam
filtered.
I would like to ask if people order from Amazon check your spam folders
On Wed, Jan 15, 2020 at 02:08:37PM -0500, Stewart Russell via talk wrote:
> There's also a free X server for Windows 10. It's not accelerated, but will
> do in a pinch.
It also doesn't integrate with windows nearly as well as far as I
could tell.
X410 seemed worth the about $10 I paid for it.
>
On Wed., Jan. 15, 2020, 10:15 Lennart Sorensen via talk,
wrote::
>
> I have X410 app for windows 10, so it does run X apps.
>
There's also a free X server for Windows 10. It's not accelerated, but will
do in a pinch.
The WSL1 terminal is awful compared to what most distros provide. Copy and
pas
On Wed, Jan 15, 2020 at 02:19:51AM +, Peter King via talk wrote:
> The real payoff is supposed to come Real Soon Now -- probably April:in WSL
> 2, the Linux kernel itself will receive system calls, running on a trimmed
> down version of the Hyper-V hypervisor, hosting files on a virtual ext4
>
On Tue, Jan 14, 2020 at 09:19:47PM -0500, James Knott via talk wrote:
> On 2020-01-14 07:53 PM, Paul King via talk wrote:
> > It begs the question also as to how different are these distros from
> > Cygwin? Sounds like these are just different attempts to duplicate what
> > Cygwin is doing. BTW,
On Tue, Jan 14, 2020 at 07:53:31PM -0500, Paul King via talk wrote:
> I have been running dual boot into Windows and Linus for decades, but had a
> major problem with the latest Windows 10 in dual booting with Ubuntu.
> Apparently, I have heard (can't locate the source) booting into Linux can no
On Tue, Jan 14, 2020 at 8:59 PM Christopher Browne via talk
wrote:
>
> The material takes somewhat extreme position, but it's curious that there are
> only 3 "content decryption modules" out there, Widevine (Google), Fairplay
> (Apple) and PlayReady (Microsoft), all of the vendors having express
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