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#protocols

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It looks like the public sector in Germany is to drop its patchwork of incoming communications solutions in favour of a decentralised/federated new approach based on the Matrix protocol with MLS for message e2e encryption.

Well done. I'd wish more public/government orgs would have that foresight.

heise.de/en/news/Matrix-replac

heise online · Matrix replacing MJP, ZBP & Co: Will state mailbox chaos belong to the past?By Christian Wölbert
Replied in thread

@thevril @pluralistic @kino

#SurveillanceState

👉Which #Messenger To Replace the #DataKraken #WhatsApp with? 👈

#FightTechnofeudalism

(5/n)

... I still have one, but 👉federated #XMPP just somehow can't seem to take hold outside of its own niche" 👈.

If you wanted to dig down even further, you'd get to the point where you'd have to deal with #Protocols:

eattherich.club/@jmhorner/1109

A French 🇫🇷 librarian association made an...

ETRJM Horner ™️ (@jmhorner@eattherich.club)@HistoPol@mastodon.social @smallcircles@social.coop Sweet! :-) For those who do not know, XMPP is a protocol (similar to the ActivityPub protocol being used by various fediverse services) that has many client applications. I can't think of any proprietary clients, though one or more may exist somewhere. XMPP actually spawned from Jabber (the protocol Google Talk originally used), and it is generally used for instant messaging style communications. It has the ability to include media, and can be end-to-end encrypted with [most commonly] OTR, OMEMO, or PGP. Jitsy on the other hand is a little more complicated, and in fact includes some XMPP interoperability. It has video conferencing services similar to what you might find in Teams or Zoom. It is open source, and can support end-to-end encryption when using a Chromium based browser. Both XMPP and Jitsy servers may or may not log IP addresses in the same way a web server like Apache or NGINX does. Though I imagine if that were added to the list for them, it would need to be added to the list for all of the others as well. Unique identifiers such as email address and phone number are simply not required for using either, and I am not aware of any XMPP or Jitsy services that have any advertising. Thanks for making the chart and if you have any other questions, do please let me know. :-)
NEWSCARD: Decentralized, Encrypted Paste Bin via Usenet Newsgroups

NEWSCARD Publish and fetch permanent named records via Network News

Newscard creates a decentralized, encrypted, named record paste bin.

[git repo] https://codeberg.org/OCTADE/newscard (use most recent version only)

With a single command, name the card, snarf the file and encrypt it.

With another command, push the encrypted file to the public network.

With another short command, snarf a file from the network.

Only users knowing the name [key] of the record will be able to decrypt it.

If a strong passphrase is used to name the file, it will be very secure.

This is useful for quickly snarfing, encrypting, and publishing a text file:

$~: card enc [passphrase] [file]
$~: card put [passphrase]

It is useful for retrieving a text file with just a key:

$~: card get [passphrase]
$~: card show [passphrase]

If and when you want the general public to access the record just share the keyword.

Newscard uses nine (9) (NINE) layers of encryption with OpenSSL chacha20 cipher.

Newscard generates 9 each of: cipher keys, salts, key iteration parameters.

It would be nice if something like this were added to the ActivityPub protocol, such that keyword[@]host.url would do the same thing. Then secret text records could be stored securely for later retrieval or revelation.

#NewsCard #Pastebin #Usenet #NNTP #NetworkNews #Encryption #Cryptography #Messaging #Anonymity #Protocols #OpenSource #FreeSoftware #BlackHackJack #Censorship #Retro #InfoSec #Ciphers #Codes #FOSS

@infostorm@a.gup.pe @crypto@a.gup.pe @infosec@a.gup.pe
NEWSCARD: Decentralized, Encrypted Paste Bin via Usenet Newsgroups

NEWSCARD Publish and fetch permanent named records via Network News

Newscard creates a decentralized, encrypted, named record paste bin.

[git repo] https://codeberg.org/OCTADE/newscard (use most recent version only)

With a single command, name the card, snarf the file and encrypt it.

With another command, push the encrypted file to the public network.

With another short command, snarf a file from the network.

Only users knowing the name [key] of the record will be able to decrypt it.

If a strong passphrase is used to name the file, it will be very secure.

This is useful for quickly snarfing, encrypting, and publishing a text file:

$~: card enc [passphrase] [file]
$~: card put [passphrase]

It is useful for retrieving a text file with just a key:

$~: card get [passphrase]
$~: card show [passphrase]

If and when you want the general public to access the record just share the keyword.

Newscard uses nine (9) (NINE) layers of encryption with OpenSSL chacha20 cipher.

Newscard generates 9 each of: cipher keys, salts, key iteration parameters.

It would be nice if something like this were added to the ActivityPub protocol, such that keyword[@]host.url would do the same thing. Then secret text records could be stored securely for later retrieval or revelation.

#NewsCard #Pastebin #Usenet #NNTP #NetworkNews #Encryption #Cryptography #Messaging #Anonymity #Protocols #OpenSource #FreeSoftware #BlackHackJack #Censorship #Retro #InfoSec #Ciphers #Codes #FOSS

@infostorm@a.gup.pe @usenet@lemmy.world @crypto@a.gup.pe @infosec@a.gup.pe

"…there will always have to be a large corporation at the heart of #Bluesky or the #ATprotocol, and the network will have to rely on that corporation to control things like identity, illegal content and spam. This may be a good enough for most users (many of whom likely don't know or care about #decentralization or #protocols, etc) but it's likely to be a centralized system that relies on trusting a central authority.
Decentralized in theory, but centralized in practice."
torment-nexus.mathewingram.com

The Torment Nexus · Is Bluesky decentralized? It's complicatedA couple of weeks ago, I wrote at The Torment Nexus about whether Bluesky could become the new Twitter, and whether that would be a good thing or not. Since then, the network has just continued to ramp up its growth — it now has more than 23 million members, up

Some of today's recordings, starting with a favorite of mine

"Breaking Industrial Protocol Translation Devices Before The Research Begins"

Do NOT skip the architecture part - There's many insecure devices and protocols so secure the OT Network.

youtu.be/OGdfAlzvuvg

youtu.be- YouTubeEnjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.

It’s October 2024 and I’m sitting here in my creative maker studio, wearing a bright t-shirt that excitedly bellows “MQTT 25”! To my left is a top-end Bambu Lab X1C 3D printer, that uses MQTT internally for communication. On my wall are a variety of connected gadgets that display data or that light up in response to MQTT notifications. Today is the official 25th anniversary of the publication of what would become the initial MQTT specification.

The co-creator of MQTT is my good friend Andy Stanford-Clark, and he announced the event on Mastodon:

Happy Birthday, #MQTT!
25 today 🙂 xxx

— Andy S-C (@andysc) 2024-10-22T06:13:54.991Z

I’m not going to post a complete history of the past two plus decades of this technology, but for those just joining… what the heck is MQTT, and… how did I get to be involved?

Connecting things

Here’s the tl;dr – MQTT is a network protocol that was originally designed to enable small devices on lightweight or patchy networks (we’re going back to the late 1990s, remember!) to transmit and receive data. Say you’re an environmental monitoring device in a far-flung area where there’s occasional network coverage, and you have limited power available – it’s important that you use the power and network efficiently, in order to send sensor information (in a minimal, but useful, format) to a larger system. MQTT is a great fit here. It turns out that a highly optimised and efficient protocol like this also scales up extremely well. As networks got better (faster, more stable, and more widespread), and as we moved through a period of greater access to efficient computing devices for edge-of-network, home automation, and in-your-pocket use cases, MQTT remained highly valuable.

What’s my connection?

In 2001 I got my second full-time job after university, and joined IBM as an IT Specialist – a consultant working with IBM software, primarily on-site with their customers, implementing what we used to call business integration, message queueing, application connectivity, middleware etc.

Within a few years I was pretty experienced within the IBM middleware portfolio – I’d been helping to implement banking payment systems and other projects using “full size” IBM MQ. Around that time, IBM was starting a marketing push around something they would ultimately call Smarter Planet. I’d gravitated towards IBM’s fantastic Hursley Lab as an engineering hub in the UK, the home of MQ and also, the base of Andy Stanford-Clark, who was one of my mentors. A bunch of us from there started to hack with this MQTT thing, which was at that time externally published as a protocol, but little-known or implemented outside of IBM. I became something of an accidental advocate for MQTT, and looking back now, I count that as my first “developer relations / developer advocacy” role, even though it was informal and my day job was something different1.

Looking back in this blog, I was posting about MQTT regularly back through ~2009-2011, which was really the period where we started to make progress in socialising the protocol beyond smaller IBM implementations. We went from having a small number of message brokers – the enterprise and very expensive IBM WebSphere Message Broker, and the excellent but closed-source microbroker and, also closed-source but freely-available Really Small Message Broker from the labs – to Roger Light‘s creation of the Open Source Mosquitto, which is still one of the more widely-used free implementations out there2. I was one of the folks who had the keys to the MQTT Twitter account and community website, and one of my goals as developer advocate was sharing and promoting all of the cool ways that folks were using the protocol3.

In 2011 I was heavily involved in IBM’s donation of its MQTT implementations to the Eclipse community, as the Eclipse Paho project. After I left IBM in 2012 I continued to take an interest, and played a role on the Paho project through my next job at Cloud Foundry; but after I joined Twitter in 2014 I needed to step back from formal involvement. That was the time at which MQTT went through formal standardisation, at OASIS and ISO/IEC.

Success and growth

It is not my place or part in the story to talk about the different companies that have thrived in the past 15 years and helped to make MQTT as ubiquitous as it has become, but it is truly one of my most proud personal achievements, helping this technology grow to beyond the walls of IBM – into an open protocol success story. Today, 25 years on, it is in many things and places you may not realise – hobbyists and makers use it, it’s used (for example) in Dyson air conditioners and their associated apps, in 3D printing, in home alerting, in industry and manufactuing – it’s almost certain that more than one of the apps on your phone is using MQTT somewhere in the stack.

Andy Stanford-Clark recently did a fireside chat with our friends at HiveMQ, that is worth a look, which is a much better place to learn more.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JYYo7ycQLu4

A small (but timely) update

As a small 25th birthday present, I thought it was about time to dump the old project account over on X4, and move us to a similarly open protocol and standards-based platform – Mastodon.

You can now follow @mqtt@fosstodon.org!

It feels like a long time, but also only yesterday – to celebrate our 25th birthday, we've joined the open social web. This is our first message posted on the Fediverse via ActivityPub!

— MQTT (@mqtt) 2024-10-22T09:51:12.460Z

Here’s to the next 25 years (or more) of MQTT. Thanks for your support!

  1. One year, this cost me a bad PBC rating – I’d spent too much time on the fun community stuff over my client focus; early career lesson learned ↩︎
  2. Roger made mosquitto after hearing Andy Stanford-Clark talk about his connected smart home at the very first OggCamp, in 2009; 10 years from the date the specification was created. ↩︎
  3. Weirdly, one of my most popular YouTube videos remains a 2009 clip of using MQTT and PHP together. It’s 15 years old! ↩︎
  4. If you are not off X already, please get away from there. ↩︎
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https://andypiper.co.uk/2024/10/22/mqtt-turns-25-heres-how-it-has-endured/

#1C1A25 #787588 #C9C4DA #eclipsePaho #FCF8FF #history #hivemq #IBM #internetOfThings #iot #messaging #mosquitto #MQTT #openSource #openStandards #protocols #Technology

Replied in thread

@ditol @samueljohn @linuzifer

THIS is where I disagree...

You may think it's elitist, but if people are too lazy to learn even fundamentals like how to use #Tails then maybe they should just not do #tech at all?

  • Like: We expect people to show at the every least theoretical proficiency in terms of #TrafficCode and #VehicleSafety in +every juristiction I'm aware of* and literally mandated #DrivingLicense|s for that reason.

I'll gladly teach #TechIlliterates but I won't waste my time on people that spread disinfo...

It's 2024: @tails_live / @tails has been out for over a decade and there are a shitload of guides ranging from written documentation to Zoomer-friendly TikTok-Style shorts on how to get started.

FOR THE LAST TIME:

*STOP MAKING EXCUSES TO JUSTIFY ESCALATING COMMITMENT TO EVIDENTLY BAD SOLUTIONS!"

Whereas with #SelfCustody of all the keys as well as #ReproduceableBuilds and real #decentralization, this would be evidently impossible even if all the devs wanted to comply honestly and not just because they could be held at gunpoint.

  • #Signal is not your friend. It's merely a tax-exempt "non-profit" corporation, and corporations are explicitly nobodys friend - espechally when they demand #PII like phone numbers for useage.

Compare that to #monocles where you do pay like €2 p.m. but in return get #standard #protocols like #IMAP, #SMTP & #XMPP and can pay anonymously and not have to provide any PII whatsoever!

  • And unlike #Signal they ain't dependent on #VC funding and #grant money to keep the lights on.

Make of that what you will, but just like allowing flatearthers to roam freely without caretaker supervision doesn't make the world less round, so won't the facts change about #ITsec, #InfoSec, #OpSec & #ComSec.

Because all #centralized, #SingleVendor & #SingleProvider solutions are bad, and if they don't even allow for #SelfCustody then they are just a #grift to #scam tech-illiterates that don't know and/or don't care!

Infosec.SpaceKevin Karhan :verified: (@kkarhan@infosec.space)Attached: 1 image @Catweazle@vivaldi.net @baeuchle@chaos.social @Linux@kitty.social @torproject@mastodon.social @Vivaldi@vivaldi.net Claiming that ["[...] Mullvad is as private as Tor [...]"]( https://social.vivaldi.net/@Catweazle/113344664983833218 ) disqualified your for any future discussion. - If you can't distinguish between a #VPN and #Tor then you are either *criminally incompetent* or *acting as a #UsefulIdiot* by *spreading #FUD and known #disinfo*, which *can get people killed* who believe this bs! I'll set you some timeout, so you can think about it and apologize in due time! #thxbye #EOD #next
Continued thread

♦️Edgar Uihlein Jr.’s second child, #Dick, born in 1945, grew up in the wealthy Chicago suburb of Lake Bluff and got the same sort of blue-blood education
(Phillips Andover, Stanford)
as his father (Hotchkiss, Princeton).

Amid the social upheavals of the ’60s, #Dick #Uihlein didn’t waver:
He married Liz before graduating from college in 1967,
joined the family business and immersed himself in conservative politics.

He worked on the 1969 Illinois congressional campaign of Phil Crane, who won a crowded Republican primary in an upset on a hardline anti-tax and anti-communist platform.

In one of the only interviews he’s ever given, Dick Uihlein told National Review in 2018 that he got his politics from his father,
who often went by Ed.

At the family breakfast table growing up, Uihlein recalled,
“My father would talk about the importance of capitalism and the evils of socialism.”

Dick said that same year that
“my father shared many of the same values that I have, conservative values.”

Dick and Liz Uihlein continue to revere Edgar Jr., who died in 2005.

Dick Uihlein named the family foundation after his father, and it now sends♦️ tens of millions of dollars to right-wing institutions.

Among the recipients of the Ed Uihlein Family Foundation’s grants are the
♦️ #Federalist #Society and think tanks that have pushed misleading claims about the 2020 election, such as the #Conservative #Partnership #Institute
and the
#Foundation #for #Government #Accountability,
as the Daily Beast reported.

Tucked in toward the back of the Uline catalog released this summer,
sent out to millions of homes and businesses,
was a long tribute to the “wise” Edgar Uihlein Jr.

“Father Uihlein, the head of the family, had a towering presence, and we respected his values,” wrote Liz Uihlein under a picture of her husband and father-in-law,
recalling “frequent dinners at his house, where business, issues of the day, fishing muskies and, always, politics were discussed.”

She ended on a note of nostalgia tinged with bitterness:

“Living your life and raising your kids were easier in an easier time.
There was no legalized marijuana, defund the police or social media.

We, like so many families, were raised with a sharp moral compass.

The rules were the rules, but it was OK.”

The Uihleins’ political giving reflects these longings for a bygone era.

Dick Uihlein is a major funder of the #American #Principles #Project,
which runs ads attacking what it calls “#transgender #ideology,” #abortion and the teaching of “#critical #race #theory.”

Last year, Uihlein weighed in on ♦️recalling four school board members in a small town north of Milwaukee because of their support for COVID-19 #safety #protocols and “#equity” training for teachers.

More recently, in his home state of Illinois, Uihlein has spent more than♦️ $50 million to back the Republican gubernatorial candidate #Darren #Bailey, who has drawn criticism for saying the #Holocaust “doesn’t even compare” to the toll of abortions and for accusing Democrats of “putting #perversion into our schools” for adopting a sex ed bill that includes information about gender identity and same-sex couples.

The Uihleins were huge beneficiaries of a tax provision promoted by Sen. #Ron #Johnson, R-Wisc., that was included in the Trump tax overhaul and are continuing to support the Wisconsin senator and fund attack ads against his opponent.

For all the Uihleins’ dismay at the disorder they see consuming the country, there is one domain where they can exert near total control.

Former employees of Uline told ProPublica the couple’s traditionalist politics govern the smallest details of how the company is run.

For new staffers, it begins with the #dress #code in the employee handbook:
Women are not permitted to wear pants except as part of a pantsuit or on Fridays;
hose or stockings must be worn except during the warmer months;
dresses “that are too short” and corduroy of any kind are strictly prohibited.

The handbook defines “tardy” as one minute past an employee’s scheduled start time.

Just four personal items are allowed on employees’ desks,
with maximum dimensions of 5 inches by 7 inches.

One former staffer at Uline’s headquarters recalled a coworker who was forced to remove several drawings done by his young child.

“Liz would walk up and down the aisles, and if your desk looked off, you’d be written up,” he recalled.
#Uline #Dick #Liz #Uihlein #Doug #Mastriano #Jim #Marchant #election #falsehoods #antisemitic #speech #Edgar #John #Birch #Society #fluoridation #segregation #Edwin #Walker #George #Wallace

Wayland: a Linux display protocol for modern needs - new screen capture assets coming ✅

Old X11 not going away - feel free keeping using it ✌️

New protocols bring:

◉Better performance
◉Swift window capture (content creators!)
◉Smooth screen sharing / remote desktop
--
Wayland in general:
◉Lighter than the old model
◉Handles mixed-DPI scaling / refresh rates
◉Low latency (display server / compositor combined)
◉Apps can't snoop each other

gitlab.freedesktop.org/wayland

GitLabCreate ext-image-capture-source-v1 and ext-image-copy-capture-v1 (!124) · Merge requests · wayland / wayland-protocols · GitLabThis is a new screencopy protocol which improves upon wlr-screencopy-unstable-v1. Supersedes: