@KarlBode As always, it's in the loop holes. One being how they define data and the loop hole they give for "de-identified" data. As if such a thing really exists today.
@JayzTwoCents what’s the word on propylene glycol for PETG? We know ethylene glycol is bad. References to a Cornell study didn’t look at propylene. Looking at Koolance 702.
@JayzTwoCents what’s the word on propylene glycol for PETG? We know ethylene glycol is bad. References to a Cornell study didn’t look at propylene. Koolance 702.
Love this screenshot. I'm referencing the work of Daniel Khaneman and how in security we make the mistake of architecting security for System II (Spock) when we need to architect security for System I (Homer).
https://t.co/KF98C1pcx4
I have LONG suspected that governments buy commercial location data gathered from all kinds of mobile apps, from games to weather, and of course, it's happening.
WSJ reports that DHS, ICE and CBP bought access to data that maps the movements of millions: https://t.co/EtPoGR3CKX
#hippasecurity With the rise of ransomware what can we do to increase vendor cadence on basic patch management? Waiting months and months (sometimes a year) to update is a real issue.
Published by request. Here is a small script that I wrote to control #Powershell from #Python.
>>> x=pxpowershell()
>>> x.start_process()
>>> https://t.co/azhjxoF4EK("$a = ps")
>>> print(https://t.co/azhjxoF4EK("echo $a[0]"))
>>> x.stop_process()
https://t.co/602Ri9iGSK