@GossiTheDog Did you get the TV program there called Beyond 2000? I believe it was Australian. I loved that show as a kid. I remember seeing e-ink on that program and the discussion as to how it could be used.
@GossiTheDog as long as it doesn’t have little notes on the ground that say “jump here”, and when I obliged my character came to an early death, I’ll be fine.
@GossiTheDog watch the review video from mrwhostheboss on YouTube. He gives a less than favourable review. What was even worse than Marques for Humane was mrwhostheboss meets with the CEO of Human Ai Pin in his review video yet still pans on the device.
Cloudflare has more services to watch for. Workers[.]dev and pages[.]dev have been being used as links in malicious emails.
Cloudflare says Workers is a system to “deploy serverless code instantly across the globe”. Whereas “Pages is a JAMstack platform for frontend developers to collaborate and deploy websites.”
Both services have free versions which are abused. Silver lining, Cloudflare might not be directly profiting from the malicious use of all of their services.
Over the last 12 hours I've been seeing a malicious email campaign pretending to be from Microsoft indicating of a password expiry.
The URL being used in the email goes to brandequity.economictimes.indiatimes[.]com.
Google says India Times “brings you the news, articles, stories and videos on entertainment, latest lifestyle, culture and new technologies emerging worldwide." Clearly that's not all they’ll bring to you!
Does anyone know if there's a way to open Adobe EPS files on iOS? Basically, needing to view (not edit) EPS files that are sent in email messages directly on an iPhone. I've found some apps that do it, but they first upload the EPS file to their servers and remotely convert it to a PNG file as an example. Looking for something that's done completely on device.
Here's one I missed, good old Cloudflare has another wonderful service to look out for - Cloudflare R2 Object Storage. I've been seeing malicious URLs in emails using this service. URLs to watch out for contain r2[.]dev in them.
Google says this about Cloudflare R2, “Store large amounts of unstructured data without costly egress bandwidth fees.” Which I think really translates to, ‘Host your nasty malware/phishing stuff on the cheap.’