Archive of ‘personal’ category

I’ve finally loaded the Steam Deck for Bub!

I have a functioning 1TB Sandisk microSD, so in Bub’s Steam Deck it has gone!

It took me the better part of a day and a half to download all of his games to it, but I downloaded all of his games to it and I am finally done with that. I am glad to be done with that because that is the “big ticket” item that he’s going to be getting from me for his birthday, and I know that he’s just going to love it. I just need to learn to work the buttons a bit better since the way they are set up is not native to me, but I don’t think that will take me too terribly long. We’ve been playing Chrono Trigger together, and I may go back and do the quest that gets you the Crono doll because it frustrated me at the beginning of the game when I was playing it on the computer with a controller in hand. Maybe it will be easy enough on the Steam Deck that I can actually do it. Either way, I’m getting that Crono doll. We are taking Crono with us to the final fight…

I think it’s time for another re-AOL post, folks!

Sometimes the randomly generated Guest screen names are amusing. I try hard to screenshot them.

Anyway…

As always, a lot of work gets done behind the scenes by devs (developers) to improve re-AOL’s stability and security, which directly translates to more people being able to enjoy using it, the chat rooms functioning better, Instant Messenges functioning better, the whole nine. One of the developers has been working hard on bringing us Slingo, though! In before a lot of the people reading this post go nuts, though: that’s the slots and bingo — portmanteau — that a lot of us who used this version, and subsequent versions, of America Online grew up playing because the only place that you could play it for the longest time… wait for it… was America Online. And man oh man, growing up did I love me some Slingo. I am going to love playing it again on re-AOL when Tommy brings it back for us. I savor the nostalgic experience of being able to play one of my favorite online games on something that I grew up with. You literally can not beat that, folks. Any of that.

I couldn’t help but see this in Google Analytics.

These are the view counts for the post that I made about Tumblr’s… site security issues.

This is good.

Please continue to view this, let other people know, and consider finding another site to blog on. LiveJournal is still around even though ownership has changed hands. There are always Blogger and WordPress, especially self-hosted WordPress. So far, these sites don’t appear to have any of the gaping security issues that have been observed on Tumblr (and let me tell you, an oath exploit is a hell of an “oops” to have…).

This shouldn’t really have surprised anyone, but…

I was this many years old when I found out that Tumblr has had far more data leaks than they have come clean about. However, I tend to run in the right circles to make myself privy to that sort of information — I grew up around hackers and programmers, and I consider them “my people” before I would consider anyone else my people. It was humorous to find out that someone with… insider information on the May 2022 data leak for Tumblr had actually found my blog, read the posts that I had written in it about security concerns, and validated them by contacting me on Discord to let me know that all of my security concerns were correct. I was then walked through the exploit used to get into Tumblr’s back end and how one would… keep getting into Tumblr’s back end, and I was told what the hackers could do (and perhaps what they were most interested in doing), which I wrote about in more the last blog post of mine that addressed the data leak.

Again, I tried to bring this up to Tumblr in the form of Tweets directed to them. And again, I was literally ignored by Tumblr. If they want to ignore an active data breach that exposed passwords in plain text, that’s fine by me. I don’t have an account on their website any more, and I have absolutely no inclination on ever making one again if this is how things are going to be. I don’t think I’ve ever truly seen a website so utterly incompetent — they couldn’t even bother responding to me to thank me for my concerns, and I already know that their “site security” (if you can even call it that) has not addressed the exploit that the hackers literally uploaded to facilitate ease of use continuing to get back into Tumblr’s back end because it is seriously still there. I mean, how can you ignore security issues that are this glaring when there is tangible proof that they exist and are actually there? Do you not care about the safety of the information that users of your site post?

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