

Grabbed, thanks for bringing it up! Looks really interesting :)


Grabbed, thanks for bringing it up! Looks really interesting :)


Absolutely. As more manufacturers leave the consumer market for the lucrative DC market, cloud gaming will become the norm as most of us won’t be able to afford hardware at home… and that makes me really sad. We’ll start to see the end of homelabs and self-hosted software, as well as our gaming rigs. Nvidia and Microsoft both offer cloud gaming platforms and are both neck-deep in AI & AI hardware.
We may also see DIY chips and new innovation to bypass the hardware availability problem, but as we become more reliant on AI/LLMs I worry that we’ll lose that innovation. The bubble pop cannot come soon enough.


The peak temperature broke the previous record set at the same station in 1998 by 2C.
The previous record wasn’t 2C; it was 13.4C and that was beaten by 2C.
“It is also about 20C above normal for this time of the year. That is a huge anomaly,” he added.
Researchers stationed on King George Island, 160km from Esperanza, reported large areas of the landscape where bare ground was visible after the mercury rose to 4.6C on 6 June.
Even at the top of the 500-metre summit of the nearby Collins glacier, Muñoz witnesses rain melting the ice.
“There was a direct impact on the glacier, which should be receiving snow now. It should not be suffering ablation at this time of the year. This is obviously not good for the glacier,” he said.
March to October is winter in Antarctica… “this time of year” is the middle of winter. We’re cooked.


I’m running into the ID verification problem too! I uninstalled the app and when I reinstalled, I couldn’t find my 2FA code in Microsoft Authenticator. Now I need to submit my government ID and do the face scan stuff.
I’m very much against all the ID verification stuff as of late, for the same reason you state… I asked a friend to give me a PDF export of my profile and I’ll maybe come back when the ID verification requirement changes.


The Wiki link covers a few exploits for the IME.


Phew. I’m about to read the article but I was worried this was something other than Copy Fail and Dirty Frag.
My home lab has never seen such an aggressive update schedule lol


https://www.vantrinh.com/about/public-record
I can only echo what others have suggested - seek medical advice.
There is no logical ties between some of the facts you state. ie:
Conservative activist Charlie Kirk was assassinated on a college campus. Jimmy Kimmel was suspended for his monologue about Charlie. I watched it. The joke was mild. I later found out Grace Van Patten was Kimmel’s last guest before the suspension, and Canadian singer Sarah McLachlan was his first upon return. Then it all clicked. I was living in Los Angeles at the time, where Jimmy’s show is based. Kimmel was trying to help, so the chairman (appointed by Trump) used his position to take Jimmy off the air. In other words, they used Charlie…
These are large subsets of people to specifically link coincidences to an individual.


I’m surprised how many people didn’t realise this. I used to play Ingress, which was also from Niantic and similar to Pokémon Go but involved agents and hacking POIs rather than Pokémon trainers and Poké Stops.
Niantic discussed at the time that this was to support their work on the N+1 navigation problem, although I can’t for the life of me find a quoatable reference for this. I played Ingress knowing that my location data was being harvested thinking it was to solve a problem.
I also wonder how many people realise Niantic Labs was started as a Google internal startup: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niantic%2C_Inc.


Windows NT 3.1 was one of the first 32bit OS’s.
It’s the memory address space for the hardware - 32bit can work with 2^32 memory addresses (bytes) while 64bit can work with 2^64 memory addresses. In terms of what that means for your gaming PC, it basically means a 32bit app can work with up to ~4GB of RAM (2^32 = 4,294,967,296) and 64bit can work with up to 18EB (2^64 = 18,446,744,073,709,551,616).
What it means for the survey? No idea, but if I had to guess - it’s either emulation of a 32bit OS or app (like a VM or something)… or a large group of people desperately need to upgrade from Win NT lol


We can go dark if we want to, we can leave the light behind,
If your friends want light, and if they use light, well they’re no friends of mine,
Say… ᕕ(ᐛ)ᕗ


I use LibreELEC on a mini-PC for my home TV. LibreELEC is a Linux distribution that runs Kodi and is pretty good for a media centre straight out of the box. I use a Rii Mini K25 remote (with a dongle) to control it: https://www.amazon.com.au/dp/B06XHF7DNQ
The downside is I can’t control the TV itself with this, but this can be sorted out with a USB IR receiver (like this: https://amzn.asia/d/0hvzkP93), LIRC (https://lirc.org/) or something similar, *and a universal remote. On my to-do list lol
I have a DHCP reservation for the TV itself and it’s blackholed on my network. The only reason it’s connected at all is so I can monitor what it tries to do.
Edit: Also need a universal remote for the IR solution so it can talk to the PC IR receiver and the TV IR receiver separately.


If your house plumbing is leaking there is water going out where it shouldn’t be.
Yes. Correct. Personally Identifiable Information openly exposed on the internet is information going out where it shouldn’t be.
If your house is leaking, whether there’s someone out there with a cup doesn’t change whether your house is leaking or not. It only changes whether someone took your water ie. a breach
Data leak and data breach have specific definitions:
Data Leak vs Data Breach: What Is the Difference? While many use the terms “data leak” and “data breach” interchangeably, there is a difference between the two. A data leak often comes from within the organization either by accident or intent, while a data breach occurs when confidential or otherwise protected information is accessed, stolen, or used by outsiders without authorization. https://www.fortinet.com/resources/cyberglossary/data-leak
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/security/business/security-101/what-is-a-data-leak
https://www.oaic.gov.au/privacy/your-privacy-rights/data-breaches/what-is-a-data-breach
https://www.ibm.com/think/topics/data-leakage
https://www.trendmicro.com/en/what-is/data-breach/data-leak.html
This is a data leak. We don’t know yet if it’s a data breach. We might not know until active exploitation.
Given the lack of control on this data, and that it wasn’t fixed until the researchers told them about it, do you trust IDMerit to have the scrutiny on their logging to know if it was accessed externally? I don’t.


If your house plumbing is leaking, its not a leak to you unless you see it? How do you know it hasn’t been accessed?
Thankfully we don’t need to rely on your definition of a data leak: https://www.fortinet.com/resources/cyberglossary/data-leak
A data leak happens when an internal party or source exposes sensitive data, usually unintentionally or by accident.
This is sensitive data that’s accidentally been exposed on the internet. That is a leak. You are misinformed on what a data leak is.


It’s not misleading. A database of personally identifiable information being exposed on the internet is a data leak. Personally identifiable information is legally required to be protected, while an exposed database on the internet is about as far from ‘protected’ as you can get.
The article and title make no claim to active selling or known exploitation of the data, but to write this off as nothing would be a mistake. Are you sure that only the Cybernews team found it?
The Cybernews team discovered the exposed MongoDB instance on November 11th, 2025 and immediately notified IDMerit. The company secured the database by November 12th.
We don’t know how long it was exposed for prior to it being discovered on the 11th - it might’ve been that day, it might’ve been a few months.


That’s part of the trust problem though; when I have a $10 note in my pocket, I trust that it will still be $10 when I go to pay for my coffee later that day.
If I get $10 worth of Bitcoin out of an ATM in the morning, I don’t have that same faith in the afternoon. It might be $7, it might be $3, it might be $15,000. That volatility is exactly why I can’t trust it as my standard currency.


Oh my god, I totally missed that. Amazing lol Thanks for that!


Would you mind elaborating on why this is your favourite? I tried to find some context for it but all I can really seem to find is the quote itself.
Maybe look into getting a GL.inet travel router with WiFi and a Chromecast/Android stick. I use that when I travel. Setup a WiFi network on the travel router and setup the Chromecast on it for when you’re at the hotel.
At the hotel, either jack the travel router into a network port then use your phone to sign in to the hotel’s network, or configure Repeater/WISP to get the travel router to connect to and re-broadcast the hotel WiFi (again using your phone or PC to sign in). Going Repeater/WISP brings a sizeable performance hit due to the lack of radios but it’s definitely do-able.
If you’re hosting Jellyfin externally, job done. If not, you can configure OpenVPN/Wireguard on the travel router and your home router and connect privately that way.
Source: Tech worker who had a requirement to be overseas 80% of the year in different hotels :)
https://www.gl-inet.com/collections/travel-routers
https://wifirepeater.org/openwrt-wisp-repeater-mode-configuration/