Never underestimate the propensity for lazy windoze admins everywhere to ride with defaults for decades. They could fix it, but they typically don't know any better.
There's still medical, hospitality, government, and industrial that probably runs off a nt4/2000 dc's somewhere, or at least xp era things they've said to kill but see above. Microsoft technically supported xp until 2019 in "iot" versions probably mostly for oracle pos systems that would never die after they acquired micros 20 years ago, probably still in your fav restaurant until around then.
The joys of a windoze world, thanks microsoft for the advent of the lazy admin.
>> The growing deployment of DNS Security (DNSSEC) and IPv6 has increased response sizes and therefore the use of TCP.
> Yes, but doesn't IPv6 also increase the "maximum safe UDP packet size" from 512 bytes to 1280?
DNS mostly has to support larger sizes, and has for decades for things like svc/txt records used for various encryption and large blocks of text. Having worked for a registrar and dealing with ddos, not much you can do but filter more intelligently. There are ddos appliances/services built just to deal with volumetric queries from hosts for such reason.
After some 25 years of consulting/professional services in IT and working probably a dozen or more health care industry businesses or hospitals themselves, I can honestly say they are the worst clients and most I will simply refuse now as a rule. I've never met one that wasn't run poorly run, overly political, low paying, high spending, morale/morally deprived... I could go on, but mostly mismanaged applies, and more so this is universal when it comes to their EMR software systems, as every one needs one.
One need only google "Oracle failure" or visit theregister.com to see a list of atrocities committed yearly by Oracle for ERP and Financial system implementation fiascos, buying Cerner for their EMR that was already bad to use could only make it worse. It's like bad and worse got together to make a baby, but what are your alternatives in the space? I never met an ERP that wasn't a mess, or the staff that tend to manage them. Oracle just keeps expanding, because why be a lesser evil?
If you work in the medical IT field, you have my condolences, and my best advice is don't. The only ones that win are the executives above their meat shields and the investors. If you have to visit one in the US, you also have my condolences, as you'll see first hand the product above commentary.
Vanilla is the best flavor. The decision makers at large health systems often waste fortunes customizing EHR configurations based on the mistaken belief that they know better than the vendor. But often it would be better to stick with the software defaults and retrain the users. Of course this is politically difficult when experienced physicians who bring in a lot of revenue threaten to leave if they don't get their way.
Mostly the fact that GrapheneOS only works on Google Pixel hardware currently and vendor unlock status. It's the only available phone hardware that provides full bootloader unlock capabilities AND suitable security protections baked into the secure enclave and boot process, including things like rate limiting in hardware like password cracking attempts via external brute-force input means, lockdown of usb ports until boot unlocked with a pin, etc. Their website spells out all the reasons.
Other phone makers could if they wanted to do the same, but do not as an active choice, or at least somebody's choice above them.
This is literally every/any ISP that maintains last-mile infrastructure or anything in between. Cable MSO's are (still it seems) the worst, and having worked for various of them in a network engineering capacity, including @home networks the pioneer of cable modems and service, I've seen it for 25+ years after now first or second hand from others that still do. Eventually it's cheaper to pay a call center agent to take their calls and abuse than fix the actual issue in the ground, which is simply business mantra for the 21st century for anything.
I have pretty good success with a regional provider. I have the option of a national (Verizon) provider, but since switching to fiber on the regional I've had a ~two disconnects, a few minutes of down time in two years. Fiber just seems more reliable.
Do you think they report income on when Saudi Arabia pays them for Apple 0-days every time someone pisses of MBS there? I bet they filed taxes on what they or others like them got for Jamal Khashoggi or other journalists they helped take out.
Apple pays 2m for 0-days now, but I bet kings pay better yet.
History has documented what sort of player they are, I suppose it says something of the times that they still operate/proliferate with impunity.
Software exploits are not munitions and are not controlled, they are not illegal to find, they are illegal to use, hence why there is a market for selling them to sovereigns who have immunity from criminal liability
Shifting liability until it reaches the end user who has no liability or takes the risk
Just look at the body counts of people dying because in crashes either they can't get out due to doors not opening, or people can't get them out due to doors not opening.
Good for Germany. If there were any integrity left in the US, Teslas would be removed from market too.
"Tesla door handles have been at the center of several other crash lawsuits because the battery powering the unlocking mechanism can be destroyed in a fire and the manual releases that override that system are difficult to find.
“The backup mechanical release for that door was concealed beneath the liner of the map pocket at the bottom of the door – hidden, unlabeled, and impractical to locate or use in the smoke and chaos of a post-crash fire,” said the Nelsons. “As a result, the Cybertruck’s design left Jack and the other occupants with no practical way to escape.”
"
It ought to be a useful indicator to Spain/Italy and their population that the only thing they're good for is football and causing misery for everyone else. Maybe some self-reflection is due.
They shut down the internet because they're poisoned peoples minds to crave watching football, and then overcharge the hell out of them to the point they seek any and all alternatives. You will watch our goddamn football and pay us for the privilege whether you like sports or not, or well shut down the internet!
Imagine if the MPAA/RIAA had this sort of authority in 2003 with Kazaa.
It's almost like Disney ran government, which even the US isn't far from.
Imagine if the MPAA/RIAA knew about this during the 2000's to use against the Kazaa, Limewire, etc during that era anywhere/everywhere. It is so overreaching the Internet would have been stalled at the time.
It is astonishing the court systems for those countries to allow this if, other than maybe football factors into their GDP (which says something about the nation, maybe they should find something more useful to produce). Just for some silly sports event watching man-children kicking balls around.
I grew up in the US as sports were just something on tv, but this is practically holding the nation hostage as though it were a religion, and the world should stop just so they can sell tickets for the only one god, theirs.
It really is incredible to believe that a sports organization has the power to shutdown what is essentially a utility without any oversight. It paints a very bad image of Spain in my mind. It makes one wonder how many more absurdities happen over there.
There's still medical, hospitality, government, and industrial that probably runs off a nt4/2000 dc's somewhere, or at least xp era things they've said to kill but see above. Microsoft technically supported xp until 2019 in "iot" versions probably mostly for oracle pos systems that would never die after they acquired micros 20 years ago, probably still in your fav restaurant until around then.
The joys of a windoze world, thanks microsoft for the advent of the lazy admin.
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