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@heiseonline@social.heise.de
2025-06-27 17:27:00

Brandgefahr: Anker ruft mehrere Powerbank-Modelle zurück – auch in Deutschland
Anker ruft mehrere Powerbank-Modelle zurück. Die Produkte werden auch in Deutschland verkauft. 

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-05-26 12:51:54

Let's say you find a really cool forum online that has lots of good advice on it. It's even got a very active community that's happy to answer questions very quickly, and the community seems to have a wealth of knowledge about all sorts of subjects.
You end up visiting this community often, and trusting the advice you get to answer all sorts of everyday questions you might have, which before you might have found answers to using a web search (of course web search is now full of SEI spam and other crap so it's become nearly useless).
Then one day, you ask an innocuous question about medicine, and from this community you get the full homeopathy treatment as your answer. Like, somewhat believable on the face of it, includes lots of citations to reasonable-seeming articles, except that if you know even a tiny bit about chemistry and biology (which thankfully you do), you know that the homoeopathy answers are completely bogus and horribly dangerous (since they offer non-treatments for real diseases). Your opinion of this entire forum suddenly changes. "Oh my God, if they've been homeopathy believers all this time, what other myths have they fed me as facts?"
You stop using the forum for anything, and go back to slogging through SEI crap to answer your everyday questions, because one you realize that this forum is a community that's fundamentally untrustworthy, you realize that the value of getting advice from it on any subject is negative: you knew enough to spot the dangerous homeopathy answer, but you know there might be other such myths that you don't know enough to avoid, and any community willing to go all-in on one myth has shown itself to be capable of going all in on any number of other myths.
...
This has been a parable about large language models.
#AI #LLM

@inthehands@hachyderm.io
2025-07-25 19:52:56

Here @…’s answer is IMO the correct answer:
When a corporation demands personal data, oblige with bad data. Ask an intrusive question, get an obfuscatory answer.
cyberplace.social/@GossiTheDog

@memeorandum@universeodon.com
2025-07-26 01:16:09

Senate Democrats demand answers on rural health fund (Alejandra O'Connell-Domenech/The Hill)
thehill.com/policy/healthcare/
memeorandum.com/250725/p123#a2

@davidaugust@mastodon.online
2025-06-27 17:47:33

The challenge of HEPA filters in the classrooms.
h/t @…
source: xcancel.com/kadamssl/status/19

screenshot of a thread by Kathryn @kadamssl: 

A new development in the sociological experiment of denial, backlash, and normalization: The moms are piling on the poor soul who sought suggestions to on how to get HEPAs into the classroom. 

🧵 

Jun 26, 2025 · 4:05 PM UTC

Common Criticism 1. We don’t even have air conditioning in classrooms, and you’re worried about HEPAs?! 

Answer: Has it occurred to anyone that kids need BOTH and not neither? 

Common Criticism 2: HEPAs won’t do anything. Ju…
screenshot of a thread by Kathryn @kadamssl: 

Common Criticism 3: Are you going to pay for them?! (They’re too expensive.) 

Answer: First of all, the school boards *should* be purchasing & maintaining HEPAs. With all of the hand waving about absences, you’d think investing in staff & student health would be a no brainer… 

Second: Is anyone considering how expensive it is to have a sick child and/or to be sick themselves? Even with socialized medicine in Canada, it costs 💰 to take time off. I…
screenshot of a thread by Kathryn @kadamssl: 

Common Criticism 4: If the schools were ever going to get HEPAs, they would have done it during COVID. There’s no point trying now. 

Answer: ‘During COVID’ is now & we will need airborne mitigations now and for the foreseeable future. Remember, policy moves slower than science... 

Just because it hasn’t changed YET doesn’t mean it won’t. But it will take pressure from citizens, parents, advocacy groups, and any other concerned individuals to get …
@heiseonline@social.heise.de
2025-06-27 03:36:00

Sicherheitslücken in fast 750 Multifunktionsdruckern verschiedener Hersteller
Angreifer könnten sich Zugang zum Netzwerk und Daten verschaffen. Firmware-Updates stehen bereit, aber für eine Schwachstelle gibt es nur einen Workaround.

@heiseonline@social.heise.de
2025-06-26 10:50:12

Zero-Day: Bluetooth-Lücke macht Millionen Kopfhörer zu Abhörstationen
Der in beliebten Modellen großer Hersteller verbaute Bluetooth-Chipsatz ist angreifbar. Hacker konnten so Anrufe starten und Geräte abhören.

Ein Junge mit Kopfhörern am Smartphone
@heiseonline@social.heise.de
2025-06-26 12:57:04

Gefahr in der Luft: 🎧🚨 Forscher haben eine kritische Sicherheitslücke aufgedeckt, die Millionen drahtlose Kopfhörer in potenzielle Abhörgeräte verwandeln könnte.
Zum Artikel: heise.de/-10457857?wt_mc=sm.re

Auf dem Bild ist ein Laptop Mann mit Bluetooth-Kopfhörern zu sehen. Im Bild steht: "Kritische Bluetooth-Lücke verwandelt Kopfhörer in Abhörgeräte" dadrunter steht: "Der in beliebten Modellen großer Hersteller verbaute Bluetooth-Chipsatz ist angreifbar. Hacker konnten so Anrufe starten und Geräte abhören."
@heiseonline@social.heise.de
2025-07-23 03:06:00

Drei chinesische Gruppen als Angreifer auf Sharepoint-Server identifiziert
Eine Analyse von Microsoft nennt drei verschiedene Gruppen aus China als Angreifer auf die jüngste Sharepoint-Lücke. Dabei dürfte es aber nicht bleiben.