As I mentioned yesterday, it was so nice out that I was motivated to remove one of the storm windows from my office and put the screen in (just one of the two – no point in going crazy here). It’s not supposed to be quite as nice today but they’re talking about temps in the 70s over the weekend and maybe even 80 on Monday (that ought to get the pool algae fired up) before of course turning to shit on Tuesday. So the big plan for the weekend is to take the chains off the tractor tires and get the snow tires off the car. Pretty ambitious, I know – and risky, too. But I reckon I can drive through whatever Mother Nature throws at us (or wait it out in my bunker, as long as I have enough beer).
Do you use Dropbox? I do – I also use Google Drive (or whatever they call it), Microsoft’s OneDrive (which used to be SkyDrive), Apple’s whatever it is they call it, I have 5 GB with Asus, and I think I’ve even got a few gigs of storage at Yahoo. And I know I’ve got, like Flickr and Picasa and other stuff out there that I occasionally use, but my “go to” cloud storage is Dropbox (at least until the free space I have gets all used up). The main thing I use it for is uploading pictures from my phone and tablet (I already encrypt any documents I put up there – not that anybody give a shit about my ref-fi documents or copies of my tax forms, but, hey). It automagically syncs whenever I dock my device and then I have everything on every device I can connect to the Internet with.
So it was with much chagrin that I read yesterday that Dropbox has added Condi Rice to its Board of Directors. Because, hey, who wouldn’t want a person who loves her some warrantless wiretaps to have a say in what happens to the private data I store on the cloud. Not that I’d be terribly worried if all my photos of dogs, cats, and snow were to somehow be leaked to the NSA (who no doubt has them anyway), but it’s the principle of the thing.
At least pretend you give a shit about my privacy (and your integrity).
So now I guess I need to move everything over to Google or something. What a hassle.
Along those lines I dunno if this has made it out to the mainstream news or not, but a while back a vulnerability (the “Heartbleed” bug as it’s known) in OpenSSL (used by a shitload of websites – for instance, Yahoo) was discovered and to make a long story short, it…
…would let anyone on the Internet get into a supposedly secure Web server running certain versions of OpenSSL and scoop up the site’s encryption keys, user passwords and site content.
Once an attacker has a website’s encryption keys, anything is fair game: Instead of slipping through a proverbial crack in the wall, he can now walk in and out the front door.
Here’s a list of what’s currently vulnerable and what isn’t (those that aren’t may have been in the past, so going out and changing every password you have is up to you – though if you use the same password for everything, I’d advise you to knock that off).
If you’re curious about sites you go to, you can check them here. And if you want more information, there’s plenty of it out there. Google is your friend.
So, a coworker of mine is experiencing some angst. Her son left for college last fall, and although he’s fairly close she laments that they “never see him.” Add to that her high school age daughter told her that there’s a boy she wants to have over and, well, let’s just say she’s got some premature empty-nest syndrome feelings going on.
Those of us who know better, of course, tried to tell her that a fledgling leaving the nest is not a time of sorrow. It’s when they friggin’ come back that the real depression sets in.
When they leave, well, remember when you were young and you got your first apartment? That feeling of freedom you experienced, and you realized you could sit around on your couch (which was probably a pine frame with plaid-covered foam cushions that came in a set that included a “rocking chair”, coffee table, two end tables, and two lamps) in the living room and drink beer and smoke cigarettes (or whatever else your little heart desired) in front of the teevee and you didn’t have to explain your comings and goings to anybody and nobody was expecting you or making demands of you and if you wanted to live surrounded by pizza boxes, beer cans, and cigarette butts, well, by golly, that was your goddamn choice.
When the kids come back, though? That’s like your mom moving back in with you. And, don’t get me wrong, you love your mom (you really do), it’s just that you’ve kind of gotten used to her living over there and you can go visit or she can come and visit you and that’s really nice but eventually she goes the hell home.
Things are better that way. I reckon my coworker will figure that out soon enough.
Oh well, time to virtually head off to work. Let’s get this over with.
After an battle with cancer and a few premature reports of his death, Jesse Winchester passed this morning. He went to Canada to avoid Vietnam and worked with The Band on his first album in a career of many great songs and rekkids.
http://youtu.be/5uKGWpqnS8E
🙁 :gate:
:joe: whew! That was a tough weeknded well, but put in some mega hours. All I can say is these wars have really messed up a bunch of young people.
So, shouldn’t a person wait to change their passwords until after the websites plug the heart hole?
I also use Dropbox. Why did they up and hire Kindaslezza? She’s very bright, I’ll give her that. But she’s quite amoral and I think that, coupled with power, makes for a dangerous brew. Need I say Iraq? I’m in the trenches cleaning up her damn mess and all the while she’s raking in more money as her prize for prevarication, depravity, and moral turpitude.
I tried to edit using my iPad, but the editing only allowed me to delete, Argh. Apologies for the goofed up sentence up there ^.
Oh and re the cardboard piles mentioned in a previous post:
I don’t keep any cardboard around. It is a favored habitat of the brown recluse spider. :billcat:
You may not be in the region of those little buggers, but other spiders or insects may also love cardboard. Off to the recycle center ye all!
Gee, thanks for that. I have kept all of my LP boxes in the event that one day I would have to move the collection again and the format was going out of style. They are in a room under the house and are probably crawling with them spiders. I guess I should set off a bug bomb down there before approaching.
I was hoping that Condi would get her dream job of NFL comish. Kindasleeza and the NFL is a marriage made in hell, sleeze on slime, but it would get her out of our hair.
I wouldn’t say there’s no point in changing your password until after the site has applied the patch and is no longer vulnerable. If nothing else, it would make them have to go out and reacquire it.
As I understand it, this is a buffer overflow exploit. They can get up to 64Kb of info that’s in memory. Then they have to see what they got (encryption keys, passwords, whatever) and make use of it.
The other caveat would be if you use the same password at other sites. Then you should at least change the other passwords. Also, if you use a predictable variant of a password (like, say, the name of the site followed by your birth date or street you grew up on or something) then you should change your other passwords (and stop doing that).
For me, Roboform (free version only lets you store a max number of passswords) is a good solution. It will generate impossible to remember passwords and remember them for you, plus encrypt them using 256-bit AES. Then you just need to remember your Roboform password. I know there are other password managers out there as well. You can also integrate it with some applications and you can create protected and encrypted “safe notes” and set up multiple identities.
I use “everywhere” which is an annual license and works to sync to every device you use (Win, Mac, iOS, Android, Linux, and all browsers as far as I know). It stores your info in encrypted format on their server – but it doesn’t store your master password. Then it periodically syncs from device to server to device.
There’s also Roboform 2 Go, which is a one-time fee and gets installed on a USB device that you can carry with you and plug in as needed.
Hey thanks, pj. This looks a great way to manage passwords. I can easily remember one or even four passwords. But I have so many different passwords that I’m sure I waste inordinate amounts of time retrieving them. I’m rather tired of the need to frequently change my passwords because of these hacker schmucks. :jason:
http://youtu.be/9tXhb–FFBQ
🙁 :gate: :fist:
Sorry. I am still embed impaired. What worked before does no longer.
http://youtu.be/9tXhb–FFBQ
Works for me.
1st was a fail but the link that works is there. I would have deleted if I saw that. I got something in the reply after a few shots.
[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MQm5BnhTBEQ&w=560&h=315%5D
So how the heck do I embed?? (I wasted enough time watching this video.)
Good for Al.