Forums before death by AOL, social media and spammers... "We can't have nice things"
|    alt.comp.os.windows-10    |    Steaming pile of horseshit Windows 10    |    197,590 messages    |
[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]
|    Message 196,913 of 197,590    |
|    Paul to Mr. Man-wai Chang    |
|    Re: Windows 10 and 11 power state habits    |
|    27 Jan 26 08:39:02    |
      XPost: alt.comp.os.windows-11, alt.comp.microsoft.windows       From: nospam@needed.invalid              On Tue, 1/27/2026 6:50 AM, Mr. Man-wai Chang wrote:       > On 1/27/2026 1:48 PM, Paul wrote:       >>       >> Man-wai is worried about his supply of microwave popcorn, getting       >> popped when he isn't looking :-)       >>       >> The last report I saw on bioactivity of radio waves, was around       >> 300MHz. There seems to be a correlation between smartphone usage       >> (held against the ear) and glial tumors in the head.       >       > And don't forget about data security! Leaving your wireless devices powered       on, online and unattended is not wise.              https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wi-Fi_Protected_Access               [61] Vanhoef, Mathy; Ronen, Eyal. "Dragonblood - Analysing WPA3's       Dragonfly Handshake".        https://wpa3.mathyvanhoef.com/ April 2019              The security then, would depend on when you bought your WPA3-equipped device.              Bluetooth was also a swiss cheese at one time, full of holes,       but they added some sort of encryption. It may not be as       bad now, as it was a while ago.              I think generally, our electronics are only as       good as the effort put in by the manufacturer,       and ... that's a problem. Finding holes in a standard       is one thing, having back doors in equipment is quite       another.              Someone was complaining about his router and the weird       firmware it had. Well, the firmware prompt said "evaluation       copy, not for sale". And the firmware had come with the       router chipset, and the small router box manufacturer       had not made any changes to the firmware. I was able to log       into his router from the WAN side :-) Pretty funny. And       that to me is as much of a concern, as the Wifi in-flight       issues. Imagine if some twit puts an Evaluation Firmware       into a box, one that does not have the WPA3 mitigations in it.       The customer might not know that the box is a Swiss Cheese       and full of holes.               Paul              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]
(c) 1994, bbs@darkrealms.ca