Tag Archive for: Taking

Taking a screwdriver to unlock your IoT sex toy is nuts

The Bluetooth Qiui Cellmate attaches itself to a man’s penis, allowing a remote partner to lock up your proverbials if they think you don’t deserve to use them for a while. And with no umm.. manual over-ride, you could find your pickle in a right pickle if an unauthorised third-party exploits the flaws to lock the cage without your permission. Built from a mixture of polycarbonate and toughened steel, removal is non-trivial and might involve taking an angle grinder or bolt cutters to a delicate part of your anatomy. That’s not when you want to find out that there is a security flaw in the sex toy’s API that means anyone can hijack your cock lock.
Graham Cluley

AT&T Is Taking An Absolute Bath On Its DirecTV Merger

So we’ve noted a few times how giant telecom providers, as companies that have spent the better part of the last century as government-pampered monopolies, are adorable when they try (then inevitably fail) to innovate or seriously compete in more normal markets. Verizon’s attempt to pivot from curmudgeonly old phone company to sexy new ad media darling, for example, has been a cavalcade of clumsy errors, missteps, and wasted money.

AT&T has seen similar issues. Under CEO Randall Stephenson, AT&T spent more than $ 175 billion on mergers with DirecTV and Time Warner, hoping this would secure its ability to dominate the pay TV space through brute force. But the exact opposite happened. Saddled with so much debt from the deal, AT&T passed on annoying price hikes to its consumers. It also embraced a branding strategy so damn confusing — with so many different product names — it even confused its own employees.

As a result, AT&T lost 3,190,000 pay TV subscribers last year alone and roughly 7 million since 2018. Not exactly the kind of “domination” the company envisioned. Despite a $ 42 billion tax break from the Trump administration for literally doing less than nothing (42,000 layoffs, in fact), AT&T’s now being forced to consider low ball offers for DirecTV after investors finally got tired of the company’s merger-mania. As such, a company that was acquired for $ 67 billion (including debt) in 2015, is likely to be sold for less than a third of that:

“The telecom giant last week invited a handful of suitors into the second round of an auction of the struggling satellite-TV broadcaster, even though first-round bids had valued DirecTV at well below $ 20 billion, The Post has learned.

Opening bids from a coterie of buyout firms came in at around 3.5 times DirecTV’s roughly $ 4.5 billion of Ebitda, implying a valuation at around $ 15.75 billion, according to a source close to the process.”

A lot of experts told AT&T it was silly to buy a satellite TV provider on the eve of the cord cutting revolution. As such it’s kind of surprising to see that AT&T insiders are surprised by any of this:

“It is very, very surprising they would sell DirecTV at such a low price — that’s a serious destruction of value,” said a former AT&T executive who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

An AT&T spokesperson declined to comment.”

AT&T bought a company based on antiquated tech, integrated it into a confusing array of befuddling, discordant brands, then tried to make consumers pay off the debt in the form of relentless price hikes at the peak of a massive paradigm shift in television where price matters more than ever. Yeah, totally surprising how that didn’t work out.

Techdirt.

LGBT Twitter users tease far-right group by taking over Proud Boys hashtag – The Guardian

  1. LGBT Twitter users tease far-right group by taking over Proud Boys hashtag  The Guardian
  2. The gay community is beautifully reclaiming #ProudBoys  Mashable
  3. Gay Men Commandeer ‘#ProudBoys’ Hashtag from Pro-Trump White Supremacist Group  Towleroad
  4. Gay Twitter trolls white supremacists and alt-right by hijacking #ProudBoys hashtag  The Sun
  5. Canadian Armed Forces Trolled The Proud Boys In The Most Incredible Way  HuffPost UK
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“HTTPS hijacking” – read more

Smashing Security podcast #180: Taking care of Clare

On this special splinter episode of the podcast, we’re joined by actor and comedian Clare Blackwood in the hope of convincing her that cybersecurity is no laughing matter. Hear what happens in the …
computer security – read more