June 2019 Archive
181.
Antitrust Troubles Snowball for Tech Giants as Lawmakers Join In (nytimes.com)
182.
AWS costs every programmer should know (david-codes.hatanian.com)
183.
The CIA Spied on People Through Their Smart TVs, Leaked Documents Reveal (2017) (vice.com)
184.
Building an LTE Access Point with a Raspberry Pi (snikt.net)
185.
An update on Sunday’s service disruption (cloud.google.com)
186.
SKS Keyserver Network Under Attack (gist.github.com)
187.
‘Pre-bunk’ game reduces susceptibility to disinformation (cam.ac.uk)
188.
Show HN: Web pages stored entirely in the URL (github.com)
189.
Ask HN: Can we create a new internet where search engines are irrelevant?
190.
Green threads explained in 200 lines of Rust (cfsamson.gitbook.io)
191.
US demands social media details from visa applicants (bbc.com)
192.
The worst morale-boosting gesture I've experienced (shkspr.mobi)
193.
GDPR Enforcement Tracker: List of GDPR fines (enforcementtracker.com)
194.
One In Five Employees Is Highly Engaged and at Risk of Burnout (2018) (hbr.org)
195.
The Toyota Way (en.wikipedia.org)
196.
Carnival Cruises emits ten times more sulphur oxide than all of Europe’s cars (ecohustler.com)
197.
CSS Grid Level 2 – subgrid is coming to Firefox (hacks.mozilla.org)
198.
GrapheneOS – A privacy and security-focused mobile OS with Android compatibility (grapheneos.org)
199.
A Visual Intro to NumPy and Data Representation (jalammar.github.io)
200.
Zanzibar: Consistent, Global Authorization System (ai.google)
201.
Tokyo proves that housing shortages are a political choice (citymetric.com)
202.
Google Calendar Is Down (calendar.google.com)
203.
Couple wins millions using lottery loophole (msn.com)
204.
How to pick a random number from 1-10 (torvaney.github.io)
205.
Welcome to the Old Internet Again (theoldnet.com)
206.
Google to Acquire Looker (cloud.google.com)
207.
Radiohead sells recordings to public after hacker threatens to leak them (scmagazine.com)
208.
Google Maps is filled with false business addresses pretending to be nearby (wsj.com)
209.
The clever cryptography behind Apple’s “Find My” feature (wired.com)
210.
Gmail confidential mode is not secure or private (protonmail.com)