I won’t conduct banking, but if someone breaches my Netflix account, I don’t care much. I run old devices that aren’t patchable or supported because they still have use (YouTube/Netflix) and I use them in an appropriate way, I think. I think it’s naive to have a blanket rule like never run out of support software because sometimes we must. Of course, maybe the most recent version has an unknown zero day (negative day?) and would also be rooted. Of course maybe I’m rooted and all sorts of bad stuff, but I don’t think so. I run Catalina 10.15.7 and I think I run it secure enough. There’s no way, that I know of, to be completely secure so I’d rather be conscious than a false feeling of safety. It’s important to be conscious of security, but that doesn’t mean automatically upgrading to everything all the time. Most tech people who think this aren't in a cricical enough position to worry about something more than a keylogger or ransomware, but if you're a network engineer at Google and think this then you shouldn't be working there. >tech people who think if you do X then you're totally safe Now if you work at a big corporation you probably have a work pc that's kept updated and where you face the same security issues as anyone else.Īnd if you're a journalist or brag about the millions you made in bitcoin on twitter then you become targeted for more sophisticated attacks. Most tech people who use crypto use a hardware wallet, most banks today will get you your money back (although the merchant ends up losing money if not insured) + you can just limit your card spending if not planning a big buy, and ransomware is a non issue for me since I keep everything important on a couple external disks. Hackers just want money and it's honestly a numbers' game. Most non targeted viruses will just wait for you to copy paste some crypto private keys or credit card numbers, or encrypt your files and ask for a ransom. Meh you probably are if you're like me, a nobody. That seems like very poor risk assessment to me. Or you can just follow the recall procedure, which is a bit inconvenient but it seems much less inconvenient than facial reconstruction.Īnd if you don’t care about your data being compromised and sold to bad actors, who may then steal your identity and cause a LOT of trouble for you, then by all means run known-insecure software. So yeah, you can drive around with your faulty airbag if the possibility of getting your face mangled doesn’t bother you. One recent iOS update that comes to mind is one that patched an issue where a PDF sent via iMessage could give remote code execution with no user interaction or visibility. If you follow the discussion in the info sec community surrounding these updates, often the vulnerabilities that are patched are being actively exploited. This is actually a great analogy now, because Apple (or whoever) regularly issue “recalls” for their known-insecure software in the form of software updates. (A real issue that many manufacturers had to issue a recall for.) I still think CSX is a fantastic tool particularly for recording videos but for screenshots I'm sticking back to the Flameshot.Īlso, Flameshot is free, cross-platform, and an open-source project.No, it’s like driving a car whose airbag is known to have a fault that will send shards of material into the driver’s face in the event of an accident. I never need to take the screenshot again because of the wrong selected area. In CSX you select an area and it opens in a new window and then you annotate but in Flameshot you can edit and annotate while still being able to resize captured area even for full-screen apps. The most productive feature I like in Flameshot which is missing from CSX is the ability to reselect the selected area even after taking the screenshot. I've been using Flameshot ( ) and recently decided to try CleanShot X after much praise from the internet but it didn't leave up to the hype. I know this community loves CleanShot but here me out.
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