I don’t want to run a mitigation that doesn’t need to be run. Just in case that introduces a problem in a system that is currently working fine and not exploitable.
So from what I’ve learned so far:
lsmod | grep algif_aead
this checks to see if the exploitable module is loaded.
You can check if the module is present in the system, but not currently loaded with:
modinfo algif_aead 2>/dev/null
If that returns information, the module is present and could be loaded.
But you have to have root privileges to load the module.
So my logic is that if
lsmod | grep algif_aead
returns nothing, the vulnerable Linux kernel module is not loaded and therefore not exploitable… even if the module is present on the system but not loaded.
Please correct me if I am wrong.
If claude code detected that you were cheating on it with another harness, it would silently route requests to the more expensive "extra usage" endpoint even if you had tokens left on your normal plan.
https://github.com/anthropics/claude-code/issues/53262
@ThatCrazyDude Please do not forget that Trump will most likely receive a lucrative royalty for this. 😎
@h4890 naturally. I mean, shit! If they used my face to brand stuff, I'd absolutely expect money for that, and it's not like Trump is any more public figure than I am, so there's that lol
"🚨 BREAKING: The DOJ just sued Cloudera for rigging high-paying tech jobs against American workers.
They created a fake internal email that bounced every U.S. applicant’s resume …then claimed “no qualified Americans applied” to fast-track foreign visa holders for green cards.
This is deliberate discrimination, plain and simple.
American jobs should go to Americans first."
Here we go again: AI deletes entire company database and all backups in 9 seconds, then cheerfully admits 'I violated every principle I was given'
https://www.pcgamer.com/software/ai/here-we-go-again-ai-deletes-entire-company-database-and-all-backups-in-9-seconds-then-cheerfully-admits-i-violated-every-principle-i-was-given/
I have an example of how there’s power in walking away.
My current internet provider spectrum no longer rewarded my loyalty with $84.99.
So I called and said I’m going to be switching to T-Mobile for $50 + auto pay.
Went to T-Mobile store setup the router, called Spectrum told I wish to cancel that I don’t feel rewarded for my loyalty. They counter offered
$40 12 months, brand new equipment faster speed.
Negotiations work with leverage, when you have the power to walk and show intent.