it seems people realized this and the old cards aren't even properly falling in price anymore, even on the used market
sus
processes like pasteurization?
the best you can ever do is make physical attacks more inconvenient, and it succeeds at that.
Here's another "critical vulnerability": the attacker can insert a physical device to intercept all keystrokes, and steal the key whenever the user enters it. A hidden camera can also accomplish this
This ship is not really chinese. It's registered to the cook islands, seems to be owned by an indian company, and the captain is georgian. It turns out that the nation of origin doesn't have absolute control over all the actions of its citizens.
Though if a chinese ship gets seized in international waters, that would be convenient 'precedent' for china to start seizing other ships in international waters in the south china sea
damn that's like 8000 calories per day
Time for a joke about zero Megagrams
No, you'd need at the very least 2000 logical qubits to break some relatively outdated encryption, this one only has 105 physical qubits (and at their current rate they'd need over 1000 physical qubits for every logical qubit)
and even if you had that, you might still run into other problems
so this seems like a promising breakthrough but it's still nowhere close to breaking encryption
to top it off, the problem was a "serverHold" which as I understand can only be initiated by the top-level domain registrar, so the only way to make sure it doesn't happen again is not to use a .io domain
the entirety of stackoverflow is not enough data to make the AI work properly. They need terabytes of text, stackoverflow has about 50-100GB of useful data at most