Text
Going on here to say fuck Bill Maher. You're hateful and you've created an angry and hateful audience in your disruptive talk show. Go straight to hell.
0 notes
Text
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
I JUST WANTED TO USE THE GOOGLE DOC SPELLCHECK COMMAND! WHY ARE YOU DOING THIS TO ME, FIREFOX!!!
0 notes
Text
There's this cat shelter that's still running in Gaza
I'm soliciting help for Tamer Skaik and Samer Skaik, two brothers who refused to abandon their cats even when they could have. But things have gotten really bad for them and they're struggling to feed even their human children and I'm really scared they'll have to resort to the unthinkable if they don't get more funds to acquire food so please pitch in to their campaigns if you can:
Campaign for their families
Campaign for their cats
748 notes
·
View notes
Text
Love it when I go to a special place asking how to do the thing and they say just do the thing
0 notes
Text
attention joann's shoppers. there is a freak in the yarn aisle buildinf a nest
77K notes
·
View notes
Text
Today I learned that Donkey said damn at the end of the onion scene. Completely passed over all of my family's heads.
0 notes
Text
Finally. The dots are gone.
I'm free.
Finally.
The Discord Inbox feature is useless and frustrating. I didn't start thinking about it until yesterday. I'm like, "Why's that there? Why's there a red dot on it?" So I click on the button, I look through it all, I think "wow, this is kinda useless actually", mark everything as read, and then when I click away from the inbox... that dot is still there. I check again. It's still there. I've reported the bug to Discord because it's gotten annoying. I want that thing to go away. And in fact, take away the Inbox feature while they're at it.
Look at it. It stares at you menacingly.
3 notes
·
View notes
Text
Cybercriminals are abusing Google’s infrastructure, creating emails that appear to come from Google in order to persuade people into handing over their Google account credentials. This attack, first flagged by Nick Johnson, the lead developer of the Ethereum Name Service (ENS), a blockchain equivalent of the popular internet naming convention known as the Domain Name System (DNS). Nick received a very official looking security alert about a subpoena allegedly issued to Google by law enforcement to information contained in Nick’s Google account. A URL in the email pointed Nick to a sites.google.com page that looked like an exact copy of the official Google support portal.
As a computer savvy person, Nick spotted that the official site should have been hosted on accounts.google.com and not sites.google.com. The difference is that anyone with a Google account can create a website on sites.google.com. And that is exactly what the cybercriminals did. Attackers increasingly use Google Sites to host phishing pages because the domain appears trustworthy to most users and can bypass many security filters. One of those filters is DKIM (DomainKeys Identified Mail), an email authentication protocol that allows the sending server to attach a digital signature to an email. If the target clicked either “Upload additional documents” or “View case”, they were redirected to an exact copy of the Google sign-in page designed to steal their login credentials. Your Google credentials are coveted prey, because they give access to core Google services like Gmail, Google Drive, Google Photos, Google Calendar, Google Contacts, Google Maps, Google Play, and YouTube, but also any third-party apps and services you have chosen to log in with your Google account. The signs to recognize this scam are the pages hosted at sites.google.com which should have been support.google.com and accounts.google.com and the sender address in the email header. Although it was signed by accounts.google.com, it was emailed by another address. If a person had all these accounts compromised in one go, this could easily lead to identity theft.
How to avoid scams like this
Don’t follow links in unsolicited emails or on unexpected websites.
Carefully look at the email headers when you receive an unexpected mail.
Verify the legitimacy of such emails through another, independent method.
Don’t use your Google account (or Facebook for that matter) to log in at other sites and services. Instead create an account on the service itself.
Technical details Analyzing the URL used in the attack on Nick, (https://sites.google.com[/]u/17918456/d/1W4M_jFajsC8YKeRJn6tt_b1Ja9Puh6_v/edit) where /u/17918456/ is a user or account identifier and /d/1W4M_jFajsC8YKeRJn6tt_b1Ja9Puh6_v/ identifies the exact page, the /edit part stands out like a sore thumb. DKIM-signed messages keep the signature during replays as long as the body remains unchanged. So if a malicious actor gets access to a previously legitimate DKIM-signed email, they can resend that exact message at any time, and it will still pass authentication. So, what the cybercriminals did was: Set up a Gmail account starting with me@ so the visible email would look as if it was addressed to “me.” Register an OAuth app and set the app name to match the phishing link Grant the OAuth app access to their Google account which triggers a legitimate security warning from [email protected] This alert has a valid DKIM signature, with the content of the phishing email embedded in the body as the app name. Forward the message untouched which keeps the DKIM signature valid. Creating the application containing the entire text of the phishing message for its name, and preparing the landing page and fake login site may seem a lot of work. But once the criminals have completed the initial work, the procedure is easy enough to repeat once a page gets reported, which is not easy on sites.google.com. Nick submitted a bug report to Google about this. Google originally closed the report as ‘Working as Intended,’ but later Google got back to him and said it had reconsidered the matter and it will fix the OAuth bug.
#very surprised it was a blockchain guy who found out about this#and then decided to let the world know
11K notes
·
View notes
Text
happy to report that gen α is using ‘Elon Musk’ as a derogative as of recent
33K notes
·
View notes
Text
Officially mentally disowning the Patriots after finding out that they've collaborated with ICE and let them use their private jets to deport immigrants. The fuck is wrong with people.
0 notes
Text
Bought a cold-cut sandwich and somehow they put everything in a hot dog bun.
1 note
·
View note
Text
I will never understand girls who throw their bras at guys on stage those things are fucking expensive and he has no use for it like what do you want him to do pass it down to his first born daughter
743K notes
·
View notes
Text
NOTICE: As more and more fanfic writers are using generative AI for their works (you uncreative dweebs), I hereby swear on everything I hold dear that I have not and will NEVER use generative AI in ANY of my written work. Everything I post will be organically and creatively my own.
43K notes
·
View notes
Photo

“There is no other home”, Soviet poster, 1986.
77K notes
·
View notes
Text
If you guys were on here at 11 years old what would you be posting about
#uhhhh idk phineas and ferb?#i would've needed an email at 11#realistically i would've made an account using my sister's email and then get punished for it
113K notes
·
View notes