Weekly Axis Of Easy #82
This week’s quote: “I guess I should warn you, if I turn out to be particularly clear, you’ve probably misunderstood what I said” …by ???? Last Week’s Quote was “In prosperity prepare for change; in adversity hope for one” by James Burgh. Nobody got it. Burgh’s book Political Disquisitions set out an early case for free speech and universal suffrage.
In this issue:
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PHP’s PEAR system has been breached
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Unsealed docs reveal how Facebook monetized children
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Password megabreach is several years old
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Fraud unmasked by the fonts used in forged documents
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Massive Alexa outage sweeps the nation
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The new AG may launch anti-trust action against Big Tech
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Cuba censoring SMS messages
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Google to block ad-blockers in Chrome
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Email trapped? Our new IMAP migration assistant makes it a snap
[ ] Sorry
[ ] We take security very seriously
[ ] Your privacy is our priority
[ ] It will never happen again
[ ] Your data is very important to us
[ ] We need to try harder
[ ] Children are important
Read: https://www.revealnews.org/blog/a-judge-unsealed-a-trove-of-internal-facebook-documents-following-our-legal-action/
Password megabreach is several years old
Yet another password and email credential breach is making the rounds via the criminal underworld, containing approximately 773 million records is reportedly available for purchase for $45. It looks like this is not fresh breach as much as another compilation of previous breaches akin to the Exploit.in or Anti-public breaches previously reported here. However, this could explain the mind blistering spike in still more “I’ve hacked your computer” blackmail spams that continue to intensify in volume.
Fraud unmasked by the fonts used in forged documents
This has happened more than once: a fraud has been exposed because documents that were forged to support said fraud, were backdated to a time before which the fonts used in the forged documents existed. In this case, the former CEO of look.ca, one of the OG Canadian ISPs was trying to shield assets from a bankruptcy proceeding and fabricated documents purporting to show that a transfer of properties to his wife and children in trust took place in 1995. The problem was, the documents used the Microsoft Cambria and Calibria fonts, which were created in 2005 and 2002 respectively. Busted.
Massive Alexa outage sweeps the nation
Last week Amazon Alexa users around the world began reporting that their Alexa home assistants had “gone rogue” and stopped listening to them. In a communique to the press Amazon stated the obvious which more or less said “for a brief period this morning, Alexa stopped working”, but declined to elaborate on why. Recall that in order for Alexa to work at all, your voice command (along with anything you say within the listening radius of the device) is sent back to Amazon’s central processing data centres for processing (and storage). I’m shaking my head here, I can’t believe that I just typed that and they’re selling like hotcakes.
The new AG may launch anti-trust action against Big Tech
US Attorney General nominee William Barr revealed in his confirmation hearings that he may be turning the anti-trust scrutiny onto the Big Tech platforms. He doesn’t think “big is necessarily bad” but he wants to know how some of these platforms got so big under the current rules. This could spell trouble for Google, Amazon, and Facebook. Oh, right, and Twitter. My daughter says Twitter is strictly for old squares like me. Their monopoly days may already be numbered.
(Remember to create your free Mastodon account on our server: https://nojack.easydns.ca )
Cuba censoring SMS messages
CSU professor Larry Press details on CircleId how the Cuban government is censoring SMS messages based on their content. The Cubans head to the polls in a new constitutional referendum favourable to the incumbent government. Tests show that SMS messages with anti-constitution phrases like #YoVotoNo, #YoNoVoto or abstención are being blocked. Viva la Constitution, I guess.
Google to block ad-blockers in Chrome
Under a new proposal by Google engineers to the open source Chromium browser specification, third-party ad-blockers will effectively be blocked, in that they will no longer be able to modify network streams.
Adblock, which accepts payments from Google, and other large internet ad networks, to let their ads through, will not be affected.
Email trapped elsewhere? Our new IMAP migration assistant makes it a snap
By now we hope many of you know that your existing easyDNS packages come with easyMail hosted IMAP boxes included:
DNS Standard comes with 3 email boxes
DNS Pro: 10 email boxes
Enterprise DNS (we must be insane): 25 email boxes
But sometimes people tell me “I’d love to move my email with my domain, but I have 5 years of my email stuck at [ insert other place here ].
Well, now you can simply input the details of your old email server and your easyMail account and our new easySync IMAP Migration tool will deftly move everything over for you, preserve your existing folder and sub-folder hierarchy and shoot you a quick email when it’s all done.
Check out the email options here: https://axisofeasy.com/email/easymail-hosted-imap/

Richard Feynmann
Alan Greenspan
Alan Greenspan
Well, it MAY have been that objectivist, Alan Greenspan
“Hey, Ayn! How wouldja like to see MY ‘fountainhead’ “? (the dirty old man!)
He should have gone to jail for causing that 2008 fiasco!
Hey! I earlier guessed it was Allan Greenspan. I then realized I had already won this year’s prize. So, let some other doofus win it…. he can use my answer.
BUT WAIT! It’s now 2019! A NEW YEAR!
So, my answer IS STILL Allan Greenspan. Unless of course,you can prove that he cribbed it from that other cheap poseur, Nathaniel Brandon.
My apologies if you are a follower of Ayn Rand. Please don’t ban me from EasyDNS.
Greetings! The quote of this week is by Noah Chomsky: “Propaganda is to a democracy what the bludgeon is to a totalitarian state.”
Noam Chomsky – for January 29th quote
Howdy Mark. Likely you’re all over this but thought this one was interesting: https://www.wired.com/story/germany-facebook-antitrust-ruling/