Not to mention the cost of insurance after the insurance companies get that data. "You looked like you were distracted yesterday, so you premiums are going up 50%"
Not to mention the cost of insurance after the insurance companies get that data. "You looked like you were distracted yesterday, so you premiums are going up 50%"
CVE-2026-3805: use after free in SMB connection reuse
https://hackerone.com/reports/3591944
Short newsletter item about one mistake from disinfo operations #Doppelgänger that makes it possible to tie together >100 domains
buttondown.com/readwrite/ar...
Everything is surveillance tech these days. It’s time to push back.
Interesting exercise by @simonlermen.bsky.social using LLM to identify anonymous posters across multiple public platforms. The LLM connects the users via content and connects to known ID.
simonlermen.substack.com/p/large-scal...
“Infrared cameras and sensors create a constant biometric assessment of driver alertness and sobriety.
The tech involves infrared cameras mounted on steering columns or A-pillars, tracking eye movement, pupil dilation, and drowsiness patterns.”
WTF?
www.gadgetreview.com/federal-surv...
Hackers may have breached FBI wiretap network via supply chain #cybersecurity #hacking #news #infosec #security #technology #privacy
Claude’s Cycles Don Knuth, Stanford Computer Science Department (28 February 2026; revised 02 March 2026) Shock! Shock! I learned yesterday that an open problem I’d been working on for several weeks had just been solved by Claude Opus 4.6 — Anthropic’s hybrid reasoning model that had been released three weeks earlier! It seems that I’ll have to revise my opinions about “generative AI” one of these days. What a joy it is to learn not only that my conjecture has a nice solution but also to celebrate this dramatic advance in automatic deduction and creative problem solving. I’ll try to tell the story briefly in this note.
YOOOOOOO fucking KNUTH dropped a lil note on a problem of his being solved w/claude y'alllllll
My second article in Paged Out! #8 was about the architecture of the terminal emulator on Linux - it's a really obvious thing until you start digging into details, as usual (link to article/issue is in reply).
“Recipients are served genuine page content directly through the attacker's [infra], ensuring the phishing page is never out of date. And because Starkiller proxies the real site live, there are no template files for security vendors to fingerprint or blocklist."
thehackernews.com/2026/03/star...
“‘The JVG algorithm requires thousand-fold less quantum computer resources, such as qubits and quantum gates. Research extrapolations suggest it will require less than 5,000 qubits to break encryption methods used in RSA and ECC.’”
👀
www.securityweek.com/quantum-decr...
The jailbreak was done on the company’s public bot, not the one inside the state system, but researchers “were able to make the bot spread vaccine conspiracy theories, triple a patient's prescribed pain medication dosage, and recommend methamphetamine as treatment.”
Agents of Chaos -- what are autonomous OpenClaw agents up to? How do they interact with each other? Read our investigation of OpenClaw at
researchgate.net/publication/...
And an interactive website agentsofchaos.baulab.info
@davidbau.bsky.social @natalieshapira.bsky.social @openclaw-x.bsky.social
i built an entire x86 CPU emulator in CSS (no javascript)
you can write programs in C, compile them to x86 machine code with GCC, and run them inside CSS
lyra.horse/x86css/
A man in a mediocre bear costume is a pretty fancy busker
A shaggy bear costume from a Spanish festival.
Thinking back to the time Axios politely told me I was no longer allowed to select what photos I could use for stories involving the Russian threat group Fancy Bear.
Anyone who thinks that probably knows very little about how information security works.
“The announcement sent some cybersecurity stocks into a downward spiral and prompted much pontificating about the end of security as we know it…”
WTF? Seriously?!?
www.theregister.com/2026/02/23/c...
I find this not at all surprising.
The first rule of tautology club is the first rule of tautology club.
Someone just pointed this out to me.
It's like doom-scrolling on steroids.
worldmonitor.app
“Go 1.24 now includes a FIPS 140-3 mode written in pure Go, which is currently undergoing CMVP testing. This will provide a supported FIPS 140-3 compliant mode for all users of Go, …”
hackernoon.com/gos-cryptogr...
I was asked to check this, the journal uses a Rail Fence Cipher, so you read each line up and down, left to right. The deciphered text in the article below is accurate, and names names. The file itself can be found here:
www.justice.gov/epstein/file...
👀
This story is nuts.
“…and then there was the one other unnerving detail: ‘Local officials and contractors reported that they found a freezer labeled ‘Ebola’ with silver sealed bags found inside…’”
www.nationalreview.com/the-morning-...
🚨BREAKING: Steve Bannon said Tuesday that the federal government is planning to send Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers to patrol polling stations during this year’s midterm elections. www.democracydocket.com/news-alerts/...
The underbelly of the conspiracy driven side of the world is a scary place.
pdjukes.substack.com/p/the-apocal...