Magento is a highly popular open-source e-commerce platform written in PHP. It is completely customizable to every user’s requirements, thus allowing them to create and launch a fully functional online store in minutes, making it an excellent choice for businesses looking to have an online shop set up without hassle.
Source: LXer – How To Install Magento 2.4.3 on Ubuntu 20.04
Monthly Archives: November 2021
Is Microsoft Stealing People's Bookmarks?
Z00L00K writes: From Schneier on Security I received email from two people who told me that Microsoft Edge enabled synching without warning or consent, which means that Microsoft sucked up all of their bookmarks. Of course they can turn synching off, but it’s too late.
Has this happened to anyone else, or was this user error of some sort? If this is real, can some reporter write about it?
(Not that “user error” is a good justification. Any system where making a simple mistake means that you’ve forever lost your privacy isn’t a good one. We see this same situation with sharing contact lists with apps on smartphones. Apps will repeatedly ask, and only need you to accidentally click “okay” once.)
EDITED TO ADD: It’s actually worse than I thought. Edge urges users to store passwords, ID numbers, and even passport numbers, all of which get uploaded to Microsoft by default when synch is enabled.
Also from one comment:Ted November 17, 2021 8:29 AM
It looks like Microsoft released some documentation on “Microsoft Edge — Policies” for Enterprise on 11-9-21. It is only a 472 minute read, but there is some info on Forced Synching, for example:
ForceSync
Force synchronization of browser data and do not show the sync consent prompt
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-…
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – Is Microsoft Stealing People’s Bookmarks?
Spotify's paid podcast subscriptions are now available outside of the US
You no longer have to live in the US to try Spotify’s paid podcast subscriptions. Spotify and Anchor are rolling out Podcast Subscriptions to 33 new markets over the next week. A total of 29 markets have access as of today (November 17th), including the UK, Australia and Hong Kong. Listeners in Austria, Canada, France and Germany will have to wait until November 22nd.
The system remains the same. Podcasters can charge extra to unlock special or ad-free episodes, offer early access and otherwise offer perks to listeners willing to pay. Producers keep all the revenue aside from basic transaction fees until 2023, with Spotify taking a five percent cut afterward.
This was arguably overdue. Apple added paid subscriptions to its Podcasts app in May, and made them available in 170 countries and regions. Spotify was effectively handing customers to Apple in those areas where it didn’t have a paid option. While it’s not yet clear that these paid memberships represent a large revenue stream, Spotify might not have wanted to take any chances.
Source: Engadget – Spotify’s paid podcast subscriptions are now available outside of the US
Experimental Anti-Tick Vaccine Aims to Stop Bites That Could Spread Lyme

In the not-so-distant future, campers and hikers may be able to get a shot that not only protects them from Lyme disease but also from the bloodsucking ticks that spread it—at least if Yale-led research into an anti-tick vaccine continues to show promise. In a new study involving guinea pigs, an experimental…
Source: Gizmodo – Experimental Anti-Tick Vaccine Aims to Stop Bites That Could Spread Lyme
Popular Twitch Software Changing Name Following Plagiarism Accusations

Yesterday, the Twitter account for the livestreaming software Lightstream accused rival streaming software maker Streamlabs of stealing marketing copy from its website. After Lightstream tweeted about how Streamlabs’ website text was modeled on its own, other companies began to corroborate with their own negative…
Source: Kotaku – Popular Twitch Software Changing Name Following Plagiarism Accusations
How Learning to Make Eggs Taught Me to Cook

When I decided to teach myself how to cook, I wasn’t hoping to create elaborate, show-stopping meals. I just wanted to be able to take a look at what was in the fridge and be able to whip something together like a functional human adult. But since I had no kitchen experience at all, making a tasty stir-fry seemed like…
Source: LifeHacker – How Learning to Make Eggs Taught Me to Cook
PlayStation head Jim Ryan criticizes Activision Blizzard response to sexual harassment scandal
It turns out Blizzard employees weren’t the only ones to express frustration with their company and CEO Bobby Kotick after The Wall Street Journalpublished an explosive report on the ongoing sexual harassment scandal at the publisher. In an email obtained by Bloomberg, Sony Interactive CEO Jim Ryan critiqued Activision’s response to the article. Ryan linked Sony employees to the report, and said he was “disheartened and frankly stunned to read” The Journal’s findings.
“We outreached to Activision immediately after the article was published to express our deep concern and to ask how they plan to address the claims made in the article,” Ryan says in the message. “We do not believe their statements of response properly address the situation.”
As the company that makes the PlayStation 4 and PS5, Sony is one of Activision’s most important partners. Their close relationship is highlighted by the fact Sony has first dibs on some Call of Duty content. The fact Ryan’s email leaked shouldn’t come as a surprise given that it was an all-hands message.
Broadly, The Wall Street Journal report claims Kotick was not only aware of many of the allegations of sexual misconduct and harassment at the company, but that he may have also intervened to protect some of its worst offenders, and that he mistreated women himself. In a statement to Engadget, a spokesperson for the publisher said the article presents a “misleading view of Activision Blizzard and our CEO.” Shortly after it started circulating widely on social media, Blizzard employees announced they would stage a walkout. Hours later, Activision Blizzard’s board of directors issued a statement expressing its continued support of Kotick’s leadership.
Source: Engadget – PlayStation head Jim Ryan criticizes Activision Blizzard response to sexual harassment scandal
Tidal Is Finally Doing the Spotify Thing With a Free Subscription Tier

Tidal, the premium streaming music service geared toward audio enthusiasts with artist backers like Jay-Z, is making some significant changes to its subscription plans to bring in more listeners.
Source: Gizmodo – Tidal Is Finally Doing the Spotify Thing With a Free Subscription Tier
[$] Rollercoaster: group messaging for mix networks
Even encrypted data sent on the internet leaves some footprints—metadata
about where packets originate, where they are bound, and when they are sent.
Mix networks are
meant to hide that metadata by routing packets through various intermediate
nodes to try to thwart the traffic analysis used by nation-state-level
adversaries to identify “opponents” of various kinds. Tor is perhaps the
best-known mix network, but there are others that make different
tradeoffs to increase the security of their users. Rollercoaster
is a recently announced mechanism that extends the functionality of mix
networks in order to more efficiently communicate among groups.
Source: LWN.net – [$] Rollercoaster: group messaging for mix networks
TikTok takes more action against hoaxes and dangerous challenges
TikTok has pledged to do more to combat the spread of hoaxes and dangerous challenges. Many TikTok challenges are harmless and fun. Others are riskier, such as this year’s milk crate challenge, which led to a spate of injuries. But well-intentioned parents and other adults who want to warn others about dangerous challenges can inadvertently raise awareness of them — even if those challenges are fake.
The company commissioned a survey of more than 10,000 teens, parents and teachers in several countries, including the US and UK. It found that 31 percent of teens had taken part in some kind of online challenge.
Teens were asked about the risk level of a challenge they’d seen online recently, not necessarily on TikTok. Around 48 percent said the challenge was safe, 32 percent said it had a little risk and 14 percent described it as risky or dangerous. Respondents said three percent of challenges were “very dangerous,” while 0.3 percent said they’d taken part in a challenge they categorized in that way.
The study found that 46 percent of teens want more information and help to understand the risks of challenges, while 31 percent said they “felt a negative impact” from hoaxes related to self harm and suicide. Recognizing and dealing with hoaxes isn’t necessarily easy. Thirty-seven percent of the adult respondents say they find it difficult to discuss self-harm and suicide hoaxes without drawing attention to them.
TikTok says it already removes hoaxes and takes action to limit their spread, but it’s planning to do more. It will take down “alarmist warning” videos about fake self-harm challenges. “The research showed how warnings about self-harm hoaxes — even if shared with the best of intentions — can impact the well-being of teens since they often treat the hoax as real,” TikTok said. “We will continue to allow conversations to take place that seek to dispel panic and promote accurate information.”
The Momo Challenge, for instance, was an infamous viral hoax that a lot of people fell for a couple of years ago. Its spread was exacerbated by those sounding the alarm about the “challenge,” which many falsely claimed was urging kids to harm themselves.
Other safety improvements TikTok has made include expanding “technology that helps alert our safety teams to sudden increases in violating content linked to hashtags.” Whenever a user searches for content linked to a hoax or dangerous challenge, they’ll see a warning label.
The company worked with a clinical child psychiatrist and a behavioral scientist to improve the language of the label. Users who search for hoaxes and harmful challenges will be encouraged to visit TikTok’s Safety Center to learn about how to recognize them. If the search is connected to a hoax linked to suicide or self harm, they’ll see resources such as contact details for the National Suicide Prevention Helpline.
In the US, the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline is 1-800-273-8255. Crisis Text Line can be reached by texting HOME to 741741 (US), 686868 (Canada), or 85258 (UK). Wikipedia maintains a list of crisis lines for people outside of those countries.
Source: Engadget – TikTok takes more action against hoaxes and dangerous challenges
How to Watch or Stream the 2021 Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade

The official-unofficial kick-off of the holiday season, aka the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade, is returning in full force this year. After 2020’s crowd-less experience, thousands of parade-goers are expected to line the streets of Manhattan on Thursday, Nov. 25, while millions more will tune in from across the…
Source: LifeHacker – How to Watch or Stream the 2021 Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade
New iodine-based plasma thruster tested in orbit
Enlarge / A demo version of the new thruster in operation. (credit: ThrustMe)
Most people are probably familiar with iodine through its role as a disinfectant. But if you stayed awake through high school chemistry, then you may have seen a demonstration where powdered iodine was heated. Because its melting and boiling points are very close together at atmospheric pressures, iodine will readily form a purple gas when heated. At lower pressures, it’ll go directly from solid to gas, a process called sublimation.
That, as it turns out, could make it the perfect fuel for a form of highly efficient spacecraft propulsion hardware called ion thrusters. While it has been considered a promising candidate for a while, a commercial company called ThrustMe is now reporting that it has demonstrated an iodine-powered ion thruster in space for the first time.
Ion power
Rockets rely on chemical reactions to expel a large mass of material as quickly as possible, allowing them to generate enough thrust to lift something into space. But that isn’t the most efficient way to generate thrust—we end up trading efficiency in order to get the rapid expulsion needed to overcome gravity. Once in space, that need for speed goes away; we can use more efficient means of expelling material, since a slower rate of acceleration is acceptable for shifting things between different orbits.
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Source: Ars Technica – New iodine-based plasma thruster tested in orbit
Bank-Only Stablecoins Limit Innovation, Fed's Waller Says
Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller broke with a report from regulators earlier this month and said he disagrees with the idea that stablecoins should only be issued by banks because it would limit payment-system innovation and competition. From a report: Earlier this month, the Treasury Department, Federal Reserve and other regulators urged lawmakers to let them police stablecoin issuers like banks with robust capital requirements and constant supervision, and said their issuance should be limited to banks. “I disagree with the notion that stablecoin issuance can or should only be conducted by banks, simply because of the nature of the liability,” Waller said in remarks prepared for delivery at the Cleveland Fed and Office of Financial Research’s conference on financial stability Wednesday. “It serves as a viable competitor to banking organizations in their role as payment providers.” Waller raised numerous risks and benefits with stablecoins, in particular the lack of a regulatory framework to ensure that they aren’t subject to runs and that their systems remain sound. “Strong oversight, combined with deposit insurance and other public support that comes with it, is what makes bank deposits an acceptable and accepted form of money,” he said. “Today stablecoins lack that oversight, and its absence does create risks.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – Bank-Only Stablecoins Limit Innovation, Fed’s Waller Says
IBM Eagle Processor Is First To Soar Past 100 Qubits For Quantum Computing Dominance
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Quantum computing might be our path to real science-fiction computing power, and it’s been making grand strides in the last couple of years. About two years ago, Google announced that it had achieved “quantum supremacy,” which means that its quantum computers were able to perform specific tasks much faster than traditional computers. That
Source: Hot Hardware – IBM Eagle Processor Is First To Soar Past 100 Qubits For Quantum Computing Dominance
Don't Look Up Is a Climate Change Movie in Disguise

I don’t have to seem more than the two-and-a-half-minute trailer for Don’t Look Up to feel confident in saying that it will almost surely be the best climate film made to date.
Source: Gizmodo – Don’t Look Up Is a Climate Change Movie in Disguise
Early Black Friday Deals: Big Savings On GoPro Hero, SSDs, Headphones, TVs And More
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You don’t have to wait around for Black Friday to cash in on savings, there are all kinds of deals out there ahead of time. That’s how it goes these days—retailers and manufacturers are getting increasingly early starts on the annual sales bonanza. So whether you’re looking to grab GoPro at a discount or stockpile SSD storage, now’s a good
Source: Hot Hardware – Early Black Friday Deals: Big Savings On GoPro Hero, SSDs, Headphones, TVs And More
DC's Jason Todd Is Looking Like a Snack in This Preview for Task Force Z #2

It’s standard procedure for comic book heroes and villains to come back from the dead. But sometimes they come back but stay dead, and that’s the case in DC Comics’ new series Task Force Z. io9 has your exclusive preview today.
Source: Gizmodo – DC’s Jason Todd Is Looking Like a Snack in This Preview for Task Force Z #2
Cinnamon 5.2 Desktop Environment Released, This Is What’s New
Cinnamon 5.2 is packed with new features, like an improved Menu applet that offers better keyboard navigation for RTL (Right-to-Left) languages, symbolic icons for all apps, the ability to hide the app buttons by default and when the menu is closed, support for displaying completion results only when the file system path entry is enabled, and the ability to show refreshed menu items while the menu is open. Learn more about the new release’s features here.
The post Cinnamon 5.2 Desktop Environment Released, This Is What’s New appeared first on Linux Today.
Source: Linux Today – Cinnamon 5.2 Desktop Environment Released, This Is What’s New
How iOS 15 Makes It Much Easier to Back Up and Wipe Your iPhone Before Selling It

Is it time to let go of your iPhone or iPad? Are you upgrading to a newer, better model, or passing it on to a family member? Maybe it just has to go in for repair. Before you do any of that, you’ll first want to completely wipe your iPhone or iPad to securely remove your personal data, Apple ID, and Activation Lock…
Source: LifeHacker – How iOS 15 Makes It Much Easier to Back Up and Wipe Your iPhone Before Selling It
Clapper – GNOME media player built using GJS with GTK4 toolkit
Clapper is a GNOME media player. It’s built using GJS (GNOME JavaScript bindings) with the GTK4 toolkit so you’ll see some of the new GTK4 features in action. The media player uses GStreamer as a media backend and renders everything via OpenGL.
Source: LXer – Clapper – GNOME media player built using GJS with GTK4 toolkit