Tumgik
#I'm going to go print this out and eat it
mumbledramblings · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media
The Humanoid Typhoon
74 notes · View notes
bonetrousledbones · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media
redrew this old thing to be more faithful to the original art and ngl i’m obsessed with it now
2K notes · View notes
mae-peachie · 11 days
Text
Tumblr media
I am going to crush him like a soda can I love him so much
6 notes · View notes
desceros · 4 months
Note
Can I just say how well you've planned this? The pain characters are feeling isnt sudden or out of left field. It's built up, slowly, swelling like a secondary song behind the main event until it eventually swaps and becomes this hellfire of brass and violent drums, maybe a cannon, or two. It's absolutely beautiful and painful as hell. The small details that give such depths of how the characters think and feel.
uwahhhh, thank you so so much!!! i'm delighted to hear that it's coming across so well. my little mastermind tented hands all falling into line one after the other, hehehe
15 notes · View notes
blujayonthewing · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
rearranged some stuff on my desk to accommodate a couple new stickers and ended up with kind of an accidental Affirmations Zone
8 notes · View notes
mildmayfoxe · 2 months
Text
getting lightheaded is so stupid. like what are you trying to accomplish here. i can't HELP you if i'm incapacitated you stupid idiot
4 notes · View notes
mayasaura · 2 years
Note
FALLS DOWN THREE FLIGHTS OF STAIRS /POS
okay okay we got a new snippet with TONS of new info
for starters, john 20:8 refers john the apostle finding the empty tomb of jesus and believing that he has risen, after mary magdelene telling peter and john about what she saw(who was jesus' special bestie BTW which may be important later think 🤔)
in terms of lore, i take this to mean that our john had immense faith in these rich people to take the technology he and his team had built and save earth from whatever disaster had occurred, but of course the rich people just abandoned them and-
oh my god
THEY'RE BLOOD OF EDEN!!!!
THEY'RE BLOOD OF EDEN!!
I will bet you anything that BOE history tells that they were the few (about one billion by the numbers John gives, less than a tenth of the Earth's population) to escape the calamity that consumed Earth. And it's true, but it's not the whole story!
What I'm wondering is what damned thing did John do, when he discovered that the investors had pulled the ladder up behind them? He's always been given to anger, he said. The last time we saw him well and truly angry was the end of Harrow the Ninth. A John who had been betrayed to that magnitude, who was that deeply in despair, I don't know what he'd do. I don't know what he wouldn't do.
The Biblical passage has me thinking something rather different .... John was told that the Tomb was open once, and he didn't believe it. Maybe he has gone to see for himself.
52 notes · View notes
handern · 7 months
Text
if you're an artist you should make more prints and zines so I could buy them and have them in my home
5 notes · View notes
solradguy · 1 year
Text
Got the new extrusion gears installed in the Ender and the whole thing recalibrated. It prints buttery smooth now.
9 notes · View notes
Text
Hey I need some cat advice!
I’ve been doing my best to research things online through articles and videos, I’ve also been talking to my friends/family that own cats, and I talked to a vet back when I first got him, but this is my first time ever having a cat so everything is super new to me (I’ve only had him for about 3 months now).
We’re having some behavior issues and I wanted to see if anyone had any advice for training or what I can do to help him so he’s not acting out. I worry that many things are my fault just because I’m not used to handling a cat.
I want to start off saying he really is so SWEET. He sleeps with me every night, loves to cuddle on my lap while I work or watch movies, loves play time, will come up and give me kisses and rub all over me when I come home from the store or school, and he never hisses or anything like that.
BUT when he wants my attention he is INSISTENT and it doesn’t matter that I’m sleeping, working, eating etc.
At first he meows but I can’t always get up and give him what he wants (usually either food or playtime).
If he doesn’t get what he’s after, he starts biting me (he literally just walks up to my leg and bites it - 0/10 don’t enjoy).
Then if I continue to not give him what he wants he starts destroying things because that always gets me to actually get up and pay attention to him. He still doesn’t get the thing he wants but it does get me to move.
This has led to a couple broken items and (this is the one that really baffles me here) the eating of anything and everything paper.
He has eaten like 6 or 7 art prints right on the wall and I’ve had to slowly start taking down any that he can reach... my walls are going to wind up barren because he keeps eating them. He’s also eaten the cover of the book I was reading, my planner, the printer paper right out of the printer, and more.
I try and keep him on a routine so that he knows when it’s feeding time/play time/cuddle time etc. but this does not seem to matter to him.
For example, he gets fed at 6am and 6pm everyday but starting at about 4am and 4pm he turns into a menace every five seconds to tell me he’s hungry.
I’m feeding him the right portions listed on the food I give him for his weight/age so I’m not starving him and I don’t want to over feed him since he’s indoor only and therefore gets less exercise.
My final ditch effort has been shutting him out of the room I’m in after he starts the destruction phase (the bedroom when I’m sleeping or the office when I’m working). But now he’s taken to clawing up the carpet under the door (I’m in an apartment so I’ll have to pay those damages) and just slamming himself into the door.
Any advice? What should I do to try and train him to be patient or how to behave when he wants something?
My attempts at research were mostly about sticking to a routine and not acknowledging them (for example, ignore the cats meows when they try to wake you up so that they learn this doesn’t work and let you sleep)... but I’m already sticking to a routine and me ignoring his behaviors has just led him to escalating further and further into behavior I don’t like/want.
I don’t know what to do and I don’t ever want to hurt him or make him feel unloved but it’s already painful for me (physically with the biting and emotionally with him wrecking my stuff) and is going to start to get expensive too as I start having to replace items or pay my apartment for damages.
He is more important and valuable than anything and everything in my apartment but that still doesn’t mean I wanna deal with him eating all the paper in my apartment or biting me to get attention
2 notes · View notes
Text
Okay. I'll post art
2 notes · View notes
Text
i'm genuinely mad at myself for letting shit get this bad these last 2 days actually. because now it means it entirely threw off EVERYTHING I WANTED TO DO FOR THE NEXT M O N T H.
everything.
the only thing that doesn't really move is school stuff. so now on top of being late for my personal projects, which arguably is whatever, i'm ALSO late on school work, which means that like...
i'm probably not going to finish anything that isn't a fun craft i can do for 30 mins at a time until this summer. and I feel so bad about it, too. this sucks. this fucking sucks.
2 notes · View notes
Text
I Am Going To Eat My Printer
8 notes · View notes
seoafin · 2 years
Text
I've waited like THREE HOURS for this damn passport
4 notes · View notes
Text
How I got scammed
Tumblr media
If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this post to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:
https://pluralistic.net/2024/02/05/cyber-dunning-kruger/#swiss-cheese-security
Tumblr media
I wuz robbed.
More specifically, I was tricked by a phone-phisher pretending to be from my bank, and he convinced me to hand over my credit-card number, then did $8,000+ worth of fraud with it before I figured out what happened. And then he tried to do it again, a week later!
Here's what happened. Over the Christmas holiday, I traveled to New Orleans. The day we landed, I hit a Chase ATM in the French Quarter for some cash, but the machine declined the transaction. Later in the day, we passed a little credit-union's ATM and I used that one instead (I bank with a one-branch credit union and generally there's no fee to use another CU's ATM).
A couple days later, I got a call from my credit union. It was a weekend, during the holiday, and the guy who called was obviously working for my little CU's after-hours fraud contractor. I'd dealt with these folks before – they service a ton of little credit unions, and generally the call quality isn't great and the staff will often make mistakes like mispronouncing my credit union's name.
That's what happened here – the guy was on a terrible VOIP line and I had to ask him to readjust his mic before I could even understand him. He mispronounced my bank's name and then asked if I'd attempted to spend $1,000 at an Apple Store in NYC that day. No, I said, and groaned inwardly. What a pain in the ass. Obviously, I'd had my ATM card skimmed – either at the Chase ATM (maybe that was why the transaction failed), or at the other credit union's ATM (it had been a very cheap looking system).
I told the guy to block my card and we started going through the tedious business of running through recent transactions, verifying my identity, and so on. It dragged on and on. These were my last hours in New Orleans, and I'd left my family at home and gone out to see some of the pre-Mardi Gras krewe celebrations and get a muffalata, and I could tell that I was going to run out of time before I finished talking to this guy.
"Look," I said, "you've got all my details, you've frozen the card. I gotta go home and meet my family and head to the airport. I'll call you back on the after-hours number once I'm through security, all right?"
He was frustrated, but that was his problem. I hung up, got my sandwich, went to the airport, and we checked in. It was total chaos: an Alaska Air 737 Max had just lost its door-plug in mid-air and every Max in every airline's fleet had been grounded, so the check in was crammed with people trying to rebook. We got through to the gate and I sat down to call the CU's after-hours line. The person on the other end told me that she could only handle lost and stolen cards, not fraud, and given that I'd already frozen the card, I should just drop by the branch on Monday to get a new card.
We flew home, and later the next day, I logged into my account and made a list of all the fraudulent transactions and printed them out, and on Monday morning, I drove to the bank to deal with all the paperwork. The folks at the CU were even more pissed than I was. The fraud that run up to more than $8,000, and if Visa refused to take it out of the merchants where the card had been used, my little credit union would have to eat the loss.
I agreed and commiserated. I also pointed out that their outsource, after-hours fraud center bore some blame here: I'd canceled the card on Saturday but most of the fraud had taken place on Sunday. Something had gone wrong.
One cool thing about banking at a tiny credit-union is that you end up talking to people who have actual authority, responsibility and agency. It turned out the the woman who was processing my fraud paperwork was a VP, and she decided to look into it. A few minutes later she came back and told me that the fraud center had no record of having called me on Saturday.
"That was the fraudster," she said.
Oh, shit. I frantically rewound my conversation, trying to figure out if this could possibly be true. I hadn't given him anything apart from some very anodyne info, like what city I live in (which is in my Wikipedia entry), my date of birth (ditto), and the last four digits of my card.
Wait a sec.
He hadn't asked for the last four digits. He'd asked for the last seven digits. At the time, I'd found that very frustrating, but now – "The first nine digits are the same for every card you issue, right?" I asked the VP.
I'd given him my entire card number.
Goddammit.
The thing is, I know a lot about fraud. I'm writing an entire series of novels about this kind of scam:
https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781250865878/thebezzle
And most summers, I go to Defcon, and I always go to the "social engineering" competitions where an audience listens as a hacker in a soundproof booth cold-calls merchants (with the owner's permission) and tries to con whoever answers the phone into giving up important information.
But I'd been conned.
Now look, I knew I could be conned. I'd been conned before, 13 years ago, by a Twitter worm that successfully phished out of my password via DM:
https://locusmag.com/2010/05/cory-doctorow-persistence-pays-parasites/
That scam had required a miracle of timing. It started the day before, when I'd reset my phone to factory defaults and reinstalled all my apps. That same day, I'd published two big online features that a lot of people were talking about. The next morning, we were late getting out of the house, so by the time my wife and I dropped the kid at daycare and went to the coffee shop, it had a long line. Rather than wait in line with me, my wife sat down to read a newspaper, and so I pulled out my phone and found a Twitter DM from a friend asking "is this you?" with a URL.
Assuming this was something to do with those articles I'd published the day before, I clicked the link and got prompted for my Twitter login again. This had been happening all day because I'd done that mobile reinstall the day before and all my stored passwords had been wiped. I entered it but the page timed out. By that time, the coffees were ready. We sat and chatted for a bit, then went our own ways.
I was on my way to the office when I checked my phone again. I had a whole string of DMs from other friends. Each one read "is this you?" and had a URL.
Oh, shit, I'd been phished.
If I hadn't reinstalled my mobile OS the day before. If I hadn't published a pair of big articles the day before. If we hadn't been late getting out the door. If we had been a little more late getting out the door (so that I'd have seen the multiple DMs, which would have tipped me off).
There's a name for this in security circles: "Swiss-cheese security." Imagine multiple slices of Swiss cheese all stacked up, the holes in one slice blocked by the slice below it. All the slices move around and every now and again, a hole opens up that goes all the way through the stack. Zap!
The fraudster who tricked me out of my credit card number had Swiss cheese security on his side. Yes, he spoofed my bank's caller ID, but that wouldn't have been enough to fool me if I hadn't been on vacation, having just used a pair of dodgy ATMs, in a hurry and distracted. If the 737 Max disaster hadn't happened that day and I'd had more time at the gate, I'd have called my bank back. If my bank didn't use a slightly crappy outsource/out-of-hours fraud center that I'd already had sub-par experiences with. If, if, if.
The next Friday night, at 5:30PM, the fraudster called me back, pretending to be the bank's after-hours center. He told me my card had been compromised again. But: I hadn't removed my card from my wallet since I'd had it replaced. Also, it was half an hour after the bank closed for the long weekend, a very fraud-friendly time. And when I told him I'd call him back and asked for the after-hours fraud number, he got very threatening and warned me that because I'd now been notified about the fraud that any losses the bank suffered after I hung up the phone without completing the fraud protocol would be billed to me. I hung up on him. He called me back immediately. I hung up on him again and put my phone into do-not-disturb.
The following Tuesday, I called my bank and spoke to their head of risk-management. I went through everything I'd figured out about the fraudsters, and she told me that credit unions across America were being hit by this scam, by fraudsters who somehow knew CU customers' phone numbers and names, and which CU they banked at. This was key: my phone number is a reasonably well-kept secret. You can get it by spending money with Equifax or another nonconsensual doxing giant, but you can't just google it or get it at any of the free services. The fact that the fraudsters knew where I banked, knew my name, and had my phone number had really caused me to let down my guard.
The risk management person and I talked about how the credit union could mitigate this attack: for example, by better-training the after-hours card-loss staff to be on the alert for calls from people who had been contacted about supposed card fraud. We also went through the confusing phone-menu that had funneled me to the wrong department when I called in, and worked through alternate wording for the menu system that would be clearer (this is the best part about banking with a small CU – you can talk directly to the responsible person and have a productive discussion!). I even convinced her to buy a ticket to next summer's Defcon to attend the social engineering competitions.
There's a leak somewhere in the CU systems' supply chain. Maybe it's Zelle, or the small number of corresponding banks that CUs rely on for SWIFT transaction forwarding. Maybe it's even those after-hours fraud/card-loss centers. But all across the USA, CU customers are getting calls with spoofed caller IDs from fraudsters who know their registered phone numbers and where they bank.
I've been mulling this over for most of a month now, and one thing has really been eating at me: the way that AI is going to make this kind of problem much worse.
Not because AI is going to commit fraud, though.
One of the truest things I know about AI is: "we're nowhere near a place where bots can steal your job, we're certainly at the point where your boss can be suckered into firing you and replacing you with a bot that fails at doing your job":
https://pluralistic.net/2024/01/15/passive-income-brainworms/#four-hour-work-week
I trusted this fraudster specifically because I knew that the outsource, out-of-hours contractors my bank uses have crummy headsets, don't know how to pronounce my bank's name, and have long-ass, tedious, and pointless standardized questionnaires they run through when taking fraud reports. All of this created cover for the fraudster, whose plausibility was enhanced by the rough edges in his pitch - they didn't raise red flags.
As this kind of fraud reporting and fraud contacting is increasingly outsourced to AI, bank customers will be conditioned to dealing with semi-automated systems that make stupid mistakes, force you to repeat yourself, ask you questions they should already know the answers to, and so on. In other words, AI will groom bank customers to be phishing victims.
This is a mistake the finance sector keeps making. 15 years ago, Ben Laurie excoriated the UK banks for their "Verified By Visa" system, which validated credit card transactions by taking users to a third party site and requiring them to re-enter parts of their password there:
https://web.archive.org/web/20090331094020/http://www.links.org/?p=591
This is exactly how a phishing attack works. As Laurie pointed out, this was the banks training their customers to be phished.
I came close to getting phished again today, as it happens. I got back from Berlin on Friday and my suitcase was damaged in transit. I've been dealing with the airline, which means I've really been dealing with their third-party, outsource luggage-damage service. They have a terrible website, their emails are incoherent, and they officiously demand the same information over and over again.
This morning, I got a scam email asking me for more information to complete my damaged luggage claim. It was a terrible email, from a noreply@ email address, and it was vague, officious, and dishearteningly bureaucratic. For just a moment, my finger hovered over the phishing link, and then I looked a little closer.
On any other day, it wouldn't have had a chance. Today – right after I had my luggage wrecked, while I'm still jetlagged, and after days of dealing with my airline's terrible outsource partner – it almost worked.
So much fraud is a Swiss-cheese attack, and while companies can't close all the holes, they can stop creating new ones.
Meanwhile, I'll continue to post about it whenever I get scammed. I find the inner workings of scams to be fascinating, and it's also important to remind people that everyone is vulnerable sometimes, and scammers are willing to try endless variations until an attack lands at just the right place, at just the right time, in just the right way. If you think you can't get scammed, that makes you especially vulnerable:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/02/24/passive-income/#swiss-cheese-security
Tumblr media
Image: Cryteria (modified) https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:HAL9000.svg
CC BY 3.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/deed.en
10K notes · View notes
anirudhpisharody · 8 months
Text
we love spending the entire day trying to prepare for something just for everything in the day to go wrong that you end up not doing the one thing you spent all your energy on today preparing for
0 notes