Muggsy
3.3K posts

Muggsy
@Muggsy68
#Muggsy_FR depuis le psn, joueur de #PS4, amateur de sport #nba #Hornets


Merci apple.


🇪🇺 Depuis le 26 avril 2026, tous les nouveaux ordinateurs portables vendus en France et dans l’Union européenne doivent obligatoirement intégrer un port de recharge USB-C universel. 📱 Cette obligation prolonge la directive européenne sur le chargeur unique, déjà en vigueur pour les smartphones et tablettes depuis décembre 2024. ⚠️ Les PC gaming, les modèles très basse puissance (≤ 100 W) ainsi que les appareils trop compacts sont exemptés de cette règle. 🤔 Cette mesure permet de réduire jusqu'à 11 000 tonnes de déchets électroniques. ouest-france.fr/high-tech/les-…









Bypassing #EU #AgeVerification using their own infrastructure. I've ported the Android app logic to a Chrome extension - stripping out the pesky step of handing over biometric data which they can leak... and pass verification instantly. Step 1: Install the extension Step 2: Register an identity (just once) Step 3: Continue using the web as normal The extension detects the QR code, generates a cryptographically identical payload and tells the verifier I'm over 18, which it "fully trusts". This isn't a bug... it's a fundamental design flaw they can't solve without irrevocably tying a key to you personally; which then allows tracking/monitoring. Of course, I could skip the enrolment process entirely and hard-code the credentials into the extension... and the verifier would never know.

.@vonderleyen "The European #AgeVerification app is technically ready. It respects the highest privacy standards in the world. It's open-source, so anyone can check the code..." I did. It didn't take long to find what looks like a serious #privacy issue. The app goes to great lengths to protect the AV data AFTER collection (is_over_18: true is AES-GCM'd); it does so pretty well. But, the source image used to collect that data is written to disk without encryption and not deleted correctly. For NFC biometric data: It pulls DG2 and writes a lossless PNG to the filesystem. It's only deleted on success. If it fails for any reason (user clicks back, scan fails & retries, app crashes etc), the full biometric image remains on the device in cache. This is protected with CE keys at the Android level, but the app makes no attempt to encrypt/protect them. For selfie pictures: Different scenario. These images are written to external storage in lossless PNG format, but they're never deleted. Not a cache... long-term storage. These are protected with DE keys at the Android level, but again, the app makes no attempt to encrypt/protect them. This is akin to taking a picture of your passport/government ID using the camera app and keeping it just in case. You can encrypt data taken from it until you're blue in the face... leaving the original image on disk is crazy & unnecessary. From a #GDPR standpoint: Biometric data collected is special category data. If there's no lawful basis to retain it after processing, that's potentially a material breach. youtube.com/watch?v=4VRRri…











📱💨 L'iPhone Air vient de passer à 779€👇 ➡️ dlbs.fr/FwAljAbo ⬅️









