Also included: Yahoo’s big hack, Garret on Lenovo, new Audacious and GNOME, and Ubuntu get’s ready for Yakkety Yak.
FOSS Week in Review
I spent time this week terminating a Yahoo account I’ve had since way back in the last century. For years, the My Yahoo page was my “home” page whenever I fired-up the old dial-up to go online, but over time the portal (remember portals?) became less and less relevant and I found my visits to Yahoo becoming less and less frequent. By the time I closed the account, prompted by news of a massive hack involving 500 million accounts going back to 2014, I hadn’t visited my Yahoo page in well over a year. RIP Yahoo. It was nice knowing you.
The other big story this week involved Linux — or the inability to install Linux on certain Lenovo machines. As you might imagine, when a Lenovo rep on a Best Buy page put the blame squarely in Microsoft’s lap, all heck broke loose. Although it turned out that evidently Redmond had nothing to do with this — the blame goes to Intel for not supplying Linux with necessary drivers — you’d never know it from reading the comments on the story as it ran here on FOSS Force. The day after we ran our story, Matthew Garrett echoed what we said, but in much more detail. I’ll promise you this: If Garrett thought Microsoft had anything to do with it, he’d be the first to say so.
Now let’s get back to blaming Microsoft for things they really are doing.
Krebs on Security in record DDOS attack: Everybody’s go-to site for news and views of security issues, has been temporarily knocked offline in a DDOS attack for the record books. We first heard about the attack on Thursday morning after Brian Krebs reported that his site was being hit by as much as 620 Gbs, more than double the previous record which was considered to be a mind-blower back in 2013 when the anti-spam site Spamhaus was brought to its knees.
Security sites such as Krebs’ that perform investigative research into security issues are often targets of the bad guys. In this latest case, Ars Technica reported the attack came after Krebs published the identity of people connected with vDOS, Israeli black hats who launched DDOS attacks for pay and took in $600,000 in two years doing so. Akamai had been donating DDoS mitigation services to Krebs, but by 4 p.m. on the day the attack began they withdrew the service, motivated by the high cost of defending against such a massive attack. At this point, Krebs decided to shut down his site.
Opera’s free VPN: When Opera announced the release of Opera 40 on Monday, we didn’t pay much attention because we don’t generally care much about proprietary software, especially in an area like browsers where there’s more than enough FOSS and OSS to go around. But we started paying attention when we discovered that the new Opera comes complete with use of a “free, unlimited, no-log browser VPN service” for anonymous browsing, which can be toggled on and off from within the browser.
What I’m hoping is that the folks at Mozilla are paying attention. They certainly have enough bucks on hand to launch a robust public VPN and incorporate it into their browser. With as much talk as they do about privacy rights on the Internet, this would seem to be a no-brainer for them to implement.
Just saying…
Quick takes: The audio player Audacious is now out with version 3.8 with better Windows support, lots of bug fixes, and with the ability to run multiple instances…. Wednesday saw the release of GNOME 3.22 which “introduces major new features as well as many smaller enhancements and fixes.” Among the new features is comprehensive Flatpak integration…. Also on Wednesday, Ubuntu 16.10, Yakkety Yak, entered final beta freeze. Expect Yakkety Yak’s stable release to happen on October 13.
That’s it for now. Until next time, may the FOSS be with you…
The post Krebs Goes Down, Opera Gets a VPN & More… appeared first on FOSS Force.
from FOSS Force http://ift.tt/2cLjoMt
via IFTTT
No comments:
Post a Comment