I worked in a “datacenter” where the humidifier function for the HVAC unit was turned off because it leaked under the floor into an adjoining office when it was trying to humidify. Management refused to fix the unit due to the cost, and saw no issue with running the room with relative humidity in the teens all winter. Madness.
Who educated them?
I think the most common answer for this topic would be, “No one, really.” Except maybe energy marketing/ads. You know, the folks that brought us “clean coal” and “fracking is totally safe and will definitely not bork your groundwater.”
A perfect example is this guy from my last job. Thought himself a leader. Thought himself knowledgeable. Always had an answer, regardless of actual facts. Alternated between barking out orders and lamenting on how he had to do everything himself. Constantly getting schooled by people who actually knew the subject matter. Those who had been around just kinda put up with his BS because he filled a position that nobody else wanted.
Enter new management, who was very impressed with his authoritative tone, apparent breadth of knowledge, and willingness to lick boot. Suddenly management is bypassing dude’s bosses to go straight to the horse’s mouth and get the straight dope (which often involved taking credit for other people’s work and bus-chucking whoever was handy). All because someone who barely knew what he was talking about spoke confidently to people that had no idea what was going on.
American here. My ISP blackholes certain sites at the DNS level. Easy enough to work around, but it’s there.
You can make rules network-wide, per-app, or per-incident. The latter is useful for getting a handle on app behavior. Like if you see it contacting 'updates.somedev.com' weekly, you can choose to allow or disallow permanently based on how benign you think the app is. But more likely, anything trying to phone home has a dozen CDNs it's trying to hit rather than an easily identifiable URL. Block one, it tries to hit the other. Maybe today, maybe next week. It gets overwhelming (which IMO is a feature for the dev, not a bug).
As a longtime Little Snitch user, it's freakin exhausting.
Technology Connections on YT did a side-channel experiment on this very thing.
Normally I wholeheartedly recommend his stuff, but the side-channel content gets very long winded and rambling, linked video included.
$10 on Amazon. Or just a piece of broken spark plug. Anyone who seriously wants to break a car window will have something handy.
Or maybe thieves are just walking down the street and see a fancy bag on a seat and a rock and just decide to do the deed on a whim and get foiled by tempered glass. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Likewise breaking a car window is typically harder than breaking a house window.
All it takes to break a car window is a single tap. There’s specific tools available, or someone can just use a shard of ceramic. Shatters completely and instantly.
So, disregarding physical brute force (because that lock bypass method will never change), let’s say a smart lock today is functionally equivalent to a traditional lock in terms of security. How’s that smart lock going to look in 5 years? In 10? When is the manufacturer going to abandon the product and stop providing security updates? It’s only a matter of time before whatever firmware it shipped with becomes obsolete. And then it’s just one more thing on the list of pwnd devices that unscrupulous actors can access at will. Your friendly neighborhood junkie in search of quick cash might not know the difference, but a list of people that have e-Lock v2.2 would be very lucrative to the types of people that run the current smash and grab operations.
Soft/firmware obsolescence is a thing with any “smart” device, but it becomes especially egregious when it’s built into what are traditionally durable devices like appliances. And even more so when it’s something embedded, like a lock, outlet, etc. It becomes “replace that light fixture, or leave that vulnerability on the network.” A lock takes that from “someone can waltz into my home network” to “someone can waltz through my front door.”
Capcom vs SNK 2 ate more of my fighting game hours than any other game, with the possible exception of SF2/Turbo/Super combined. It had everything I could ever want at the time.
Oh, no mockery intended on my part. I was just trying to make sure all of the elements got equal representation.