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Cuties can have a giant pile of dead hardware platforms, as a treat

NEW exclusive from USA Today and #DDoSecrets reveals which US gun sellers are behind Mexican cartel violence usatoday.com/story/news/invest

Massive data leak ties names of American shops and buyers to thousands of guns recovered at Mexican crime scenes.

๐Ÿณ๏ธโ€๐ŸŒˆ๐Ÿณ๏ธโ€โšง๏ธ๐Ÿ’–

โ€ข

#furryart #furryartist #mastoartist

For more than four days, a server at the very core of the Internetโ€™s domain name system was out of sync with its 12 root server peers due to an unexplained glitch that could have caused stability and security problems worldwide. This server, maintained by Internet carrier Cogent Communications, is one of the 13 root servers that provision the Internetโ€™s root zone, which sits at the top of the hierarchical distributed database known as the domain name system, or DNS.

Given the crucial role a root server provides in ensuring one device can find any other device on the Internet, there are 13 of root servers geographically dispersed all over the world. Normally, the 13 root serversโ€”each operated by a different entityโ€”march in lockstep. When a change is made to the contents they host, it generally occurs on all of them within a few seconds or minutes at most.
Strange events at the C-root name server

This tight synchronization is crucial for ensuring stability. If one root server directs traffic lookups to one intermediate server and another root server sends lookups to a different intermediate server, the Internet as we know it could collapse. More important still, root servers store the cryptographic keys necessary to authenticate some of intermediate servers under a mechanism known as DNSSEC. If keys arenโ€™t identical across all 13 root servers, thereโ€™s an increased risk of attacks such as DNS cache poisoning.

For reasons that remain unclear outside of Cogentโ€”which declined to comment for this postโ€”the c-root itโ€™s responsible for maintaining suddenly stopped updating on Saturday. Stรฉphane Bortzmeyer, a French engineer who was among the first to flag the problem in a Tuesday post, noted then that the c-root was three days behind the rest of the root servers.

arstechnica.com/security/2024/

thanks to capitalism we now have climate refugees, I am allowed to be pissed

what we thought Linux was: that programmer OS that programmers who program programmedly use

what Linux actually is: an OS you put on your computer so you can go online, chat with friends, write documents, turn those documents into PDFs, and so on

why we thought Linux was that other thing: making things like video card drivers and graphical user interfaces is expensive and Linux is chronically underfunded, so it took them a while to get all most of enough of the things they wanted working so you can just do things on it, and during that time it was hard to use without programming

why we installed Linux even though we thought we would be in for a real rollercoaster ride learning computer toucher secrets: we hate ads so much that we will walk through fire just so we see fewer of them (but fortunately we mostly didn't have to)

wait, what's that "mostly"? look, if you don't want to learn the programming language Nix, you maybe shouldn't install an OS built entirely out of using the programming language Nix, Packbats

(edited to fix markdown)

i love that dwarf fortress is over 20 years old now and for ages now it has had a system for simulating the sexuality and romanticism spectrum, with having a separate token value for romantic and sexual feelings :dwarf:

all creatures can be ace, aroace, bisexual, biromantic, homosexual, homoromantic and so forth

blessed ๐Ÿ’—

Google promised a better search experience โ€” now itโ€™s telling us to put glue on our pizza theverge.com/2024/5/23/2416289

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Computer Fairies

Computer Fairies is a Mastodon instance that aims to be as queer, friendly and furry as possible. We welcome all kinds of computer fairies!