mintCast 315.5 – On OggCamp with Les and Dan (mp3)
MP3 – mintCast
English - August 22, 2019 01:41 - 1 hour - 48.6 MB - ★★★★★ - 15 ratingsTechnology Homepage Download Apple Podcasts Google Podcasts Overcast Castro Pocket Casts RSS feed
In the second half, we interview Dan and Les about OggCamp and get more than we bargained for.
Then, in our security update, we talk about how Chrome's Incognito mode can be detected.
Finally, we share feedback and point out a few things we found interesting this fortnight.
In the second half, we interview Dan and Les about OggCamp and get more than we bargained for.
Then, in our security update, we talk about how Chrome’s Incognito mode can be detected.
Finally, we share feedback and point out a few things we found interesting this fortnight.
LINUX INNARDS:
OggCamp 2009-2019
So this week we are happy to have two special guests on the show, Dan and Les, to tell us some of the history of OggCamp and Talk about this years 10th Anniversary event In Manchester (UK) and Josh is going to lead the interview, Go for it Josh.
It’s great to have you both on the show with us! Please introduce yourselves and tell us what OggCamp is and how you got involved in it?
Some of us have heard of OggCamp before, but it would be great to get a bit of background to the event. What exactly is it and how did it start?
What are some of your best memories of prior OggCamps?
Is there anything special about the event this year? What can people expect in terms of talks and sessions?
Can anyone do a talk, whether they’re a beginner or an expert?
Where can people book a ticket?
Finally, where can people follow you both and follow OggCamp on the internet?
EMAIL: [email protected]
Twitter: @oggcamp @biglesp @methoddan| We are on Mastodon.social now as well
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/OggCamp
Telegram: https://t.me/joinchat/AAAAAAsF-xo4ol9jAjNW8A
http://danlynch.org
Freenode: #oggcamp
SECURITY UPDATE:
Sites are Detecting Whether Someone Is Using Chrome Incognito Mode
The quota
Sites can detect incognito through disk quotas by probing how much free space is available. Incognito sets a hard quota of 120MB. When a site sees this quota, it assumes you’re Incognito
The timings
Another way sites can detect Incognito is through how quickly information is written to “disk.” In Incognito, everything is written to RAM which is always quicker than even the fastest SSDs. A site will also assume you’re Incognito if it sees RAM-type speeds.
Sites are already using Vikas Mishra’s research to continue countering Incognito
Google promises to fight back
A question: How does Firefox handle these situations? Are there issues there too? [Don’t use Chrome/ium/Edge/Vivaldi/Opera/Brave/SRWareIron]
Ask Joe how to make chrome anonymous
There’s an interesting PIA sponsored LTT video on using Tor browser, a VPN and Tails Linux distro (a linux OS that runs off of RAM)
VIBRATIONS FROM THE ETHER:
Henrik (Post on our site from 313.5 – Desktop Environments)
https://www.hemrin.com/business-blog/184-how-ram-memory-hungry-are-linux-distros
Mike (Post on our site from 313.5 – Desktop Environments)
Larry
Another from Henrik
WRAP-UP:
Dan Lynch – @methoddan
Les Pounder – @biglesp
OggCamp – @oggcamp
Joe – www.Tllts.org www.linuxlugcast.com MeWe [email protected]
Bo – undercastnetwork.com
Moss – Triad Bardic College, Peaceful Hippo, MeWe, music on Bandcamp and all over YouTube (search for Moss Bliss, ignore the young black South African gospel singer), [email protected], [email protected]
Tony Hughes – HPR – http://hackerpublicradio.org/correspondents.php?hostid=338
Occasional Blog https://tony-hughes.blogspot.com/
Twitter @TonyH1212, [email protected] [email protected]
Tony Watts – [email protected], Echoes of Savages (band)
Josh – [email protected], [email protected], edublocks.org and @all_about_code on Twitter
Leo – leochavez.org and @leochavez on Twitter, and Full Circle Weekly News
Before we leave, we want to make sure to acknowledge some of the people who make mintCast possible …
Josh for working on redesigning our website, setting up the YouTube stream, and providing lots of technical help.
Bytemark hosting for providing the new hosting server for the website.
Archive.org for hosting our audio files.
The folks at Hacker Public Radio for the Mumble server we use to communicate
The Linux Mint development team for the fine distro we love to talk about. [Thanks Clem!]