

Weird that The Guardian has chosen a completely unique new convention for naming this guy in headlines. Everyone else would have their family name in the headline.


Weird that The Guardian has chosen a completely unique new convention for naming this guy in headlines. Everyone else would have their family name in the headline.
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Most monitors has got to be the security guard’s CCTV, so it does track!
Is that a quantum boolean?


Did it make a difference when China built that big container port in Peru and started connecting it with railways to the Atlantic coast?
For a somewhat recent real-world example of hiding things in this kind of situation, maybe look at how ‘paramilitary’ people in Northern Ireland hid things by putting them in walls and then decorating the wall.
Maybe some “outlet” in your house is actually the connector to the NAS sealed into a void space?


That’s already illegal? It used to be https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obtaining_pecuniary_advantage_by_deception and is now just fraud.
Same issue with white balance settings in cameras - the setting should be non-linear to give the same perceived change per step.
Sorry if this is obvious to everyone, but how would having a hidden hard disk help with living in a dictatorship?
Couldn’t you just let someone in another country take care of archiving it?


Doesn’t he live in Moscow? So it might just be due to the sanctions.


Can even be used as an illusion of a teleport!


CIO been spending their money on REIT shares…


It didn’t help when any page which could be rewritten with mathematical notation was rewritten as mathematical notation.


If they build something to attack missiles immediately after launch, how do the Americans even know who is the target?
Like, you’re choosing whether or not to shoot down a missile that launches in the general direction of Canada and America, but at launch you can’t see exactly which?
Exactly - not only can all modern cars remotely be accessed, anyone with access to those [insecure] maintenance pages could hypothetically:
At that point, I wonder what access the car has to affect whether the driver’s phone can make a call…


But how else can it book requests for priority access, and verify the credit card for whoever booked the elevator?
“Generate a movie in the style of star wars”
doesn’t this just raise the authentication requirements? like in the uk we got added checks for who was could work, and lots of deliveroo drivers shared the login + password of someone they knew who was verified.