Forwarded from Mishaal's Android News Feed
🕓 Android 16 QPR1 beta 2 has a hidden customization option for the lock screen clock
You can now choose a "Sharp" font style for the lock screen clock by tapping on the default clock in the lock screen preview.
Thanks to Reddit user als26 for the tip!
🔗 https://www.androidauthority.com/android-16-lock-screen-clock-hidden-customization-3568273/
You can now choose a "Sharp" font style for the lock screen clock by tapping on the default clock in the lock screen preview.
Thanks to Reddit user als26 for the tip!
🔗 https://www.androidauthority.com/android-16-lock-screen-clock-hidden-customization-3568273/
Android Authority
Android 16 QPR1 beta 2 has a hidden customization option for the lock screen clock
Android 16 QPR1 Beta 2 has a hidden lock screen clock customization option that lets you change the font style with a tap.
Forwarded from Mishaal's Android News Feed
📲 Android 16 QPR1 Beta 2 adds new animation for the power button long-press gesture
This new animation plays before the Gemini overlay pops up and basically makes it feel like you're squeezing the phone.
Thanks to A_Button117 on Discord for the tip!
https://www.androidauthority.com/android-16-qpr1-beta-2-power-button-animation-3567943/
This new animation plays before the Gemini overlay pops up and basically makes it feel like you're squeezing the phone.
Thanks to A_Button117 on Discord for the tip!
https://www.androidauthority.com/android-16-qpr1-beta-2-power-button-animation-3567943/
Android Authority
Android 16 QPR1 Beta 2 adds new animation for the power button long-press gesture
Android 16 QPR1 beta 2 starts testing the new animation for the power button long-press gesture we first spotted last month.
Forwarded from The Hacker News
🚨 130,000 devices. One forgotten service account.
A 2024 botnet attack used stale Microsoft 365 accounts with weak passwords—bypassing MFA silently via legacy auth.
If you're not auditing AD service accounts, you're already exposed.
Here’s how to fix it ↓ https://thehackernews.com/2025/06/are-forgotten-ad-service-accounts.html
A 2024 botnet attack used stale Microsoft 365 accounts with weak passwords—bypassing MFA silently via legacy auth.
If you're not auditing AD service accounts, you're already exposed.
Here’s how to fix it ↓ https://thehackernews.com/2025/06/are-forgotten-ad-service-accounts.html
Forwarded from Gizchina.com
25,500mAh Projector Phone Ulefone Armor 34 Pro Kicks Off Early Bird Sale Now!
https://www.gizchina.com/2025/06/17/ulefone-armor-34-pro-kicks-off-early-bird/
https://www.gizchina.com/2025/06/17/ulefone-armor-34-pro-kicks-off-early-bird/
Forwarded from Hacker News
www.kicad.org
KiCad and Wayland Support
The KiCad development team frequently receives questions about our support for Wayland. Given that Fedora and Ubuntu are both planning to drop X11 support from their main desktop environments in the near future, we want to provide clear, transparent guidance…
Forwarded from The Hacker News
🚨 A LangChain vulnerability let attackers steal OpenAI API keys, prompts & files—just by clicking “Try It.”
All data silently routed through a malicious proxy.
Details → https://thehackernews.com/2025/06/langchain-langsmith-bug-let-hackers.html
Patched now—but the risk was real.
All data silently routed through a malicious proxy.
Details → https://thehackernews.com/2025/06/langchain-langsmith-bug-let-hackers.html
Patched now—but the risk was real.
Forwarded from 𝗽𝗼𝗽𝗠𝗢𝗗𝗦 | 𝗙𝗢𝗦𝗦, 𝗟𝗶𝗳𝗲, 𝗠𝗲𝗺𝗲𝘀 (Ömer)
nNotes
Smart, Minimal Notes App
Stay organized with nNotes – your lightweight, clutter-free notes app. Built with React Native & Expo for smooth performance across devices. Download now and simplify your note-taking!
🔗 Links:
- Download
- Screenshots
- Features
- Support group
- Source code
Developer: Bhavukverma17
🏷 Tags: #Android #Productivity
Smart, Minimal Notes App
Stay organized with nNotes – your lightweight, clutter-free notes app. Built with React Native & Expo for smooth performance across devices. Download now and simplify your note-taking!
🔗 Links:
- Download
- Screenshots
- Features
- Support group
- Source code
Developer: Bhavukverma17
❤️ Support the Project
If this project makes your life easier, here are a few quick ways to show some love:
⭐ Star the repo/app
☕ Buy a coffee for the developer
🛠 Contribute code, issues, or pull-requests
🏷 Tags: #Android #Productivity
Forwarded from Bones' Tech Garage
Not sure how well this works but it's been what the remaining big tech account I have does. Depending on your usage for an email account like this it can be a liability if it's tied to you.
https://www.makeuseof.com/disposable-emails-practical-privacy-uses/
https://www.makeuseof.com/disposable-emails-practical-privacy-uses/
MUO
Burner Emails Aren't Just for Spam—I Use Them for These 6 Handy Purposes
Not just a shield from junk—burner emails can actually simplify your life.
Forwarded from The Hacker News
🚨 A Chrome zero-day (CVE-2025-2783) was used in a live attack to drop a stealthy backdoor.
The hacker group TaxOff tricked targets with fake forum invites—one click, full compromise.
Here’s how the Trinper malware quietly hijacked systems ↓ https://thehackernews.com/2025/06/google-chrome-zero-day-cve-2025-2783.html
The hacker group TaxOff tricked targets with fake forum invites—one click, full compromise.
Here’s how the Trinper malware quietly hijacked systems ↓ https://thehackernews.com/2025/06/google-chrome-zero-day-cve-2025-2783.html
Forwarded from cKure
■■■□□ ASUS Armoury Crates bug; let attackers get Windows admin privileges.
https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/asus-armoury-crate-bug-lets-attackers-get-windows-admin-privileges/
https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/asus-armoury-crate-bug-lets-attackers-get-windows-admin-privileges/
BleepingComputer
ASUS Armoury Crate bug lets attackers get Windows admin privileges
A high-severity vulnerability in ASUS Armoury Crate software could allow threat actors to escalate their privileges to SYSTEM level on Windows machines.
Forwarded from Derrick Broze's Daily News
The other day I took my nephew to get a smoothie. While we were checking out the lady at the counter asked for a name for the order. I responded with "David". My nephew looked at me with confusion.
As we walked away I explained that Uncle Derrick values privacy and that there's no reason restaurants need to know your name to make a smoothie for you. I told him about the world before he was born in 2012 and how people used to care about protecting their private information. I said that even though giving a name is "not a big deal" its just one way I flex my privacy muscle and encouraged him to be careful about handing over his personal data while he's playing on his phone.
He responded, "Ok Uncle David", and proceeded to tell me his favorite alias.
As we walked away I explained that Uncle Derrick values privacy and that there's no reason restaurants need to know your name to make a smoothie for you. I told him about the world before he was born in 2012 and how people used to care about protecting their private information. I said that even though giving a name is "not a big deal" its just one way I flex my privacy muscle and encouraged him to be careful about handing over his personal data while he's playing on his phone.
He responded, "Ok Uncle David", and proceeded to tell me his favorite alias.
No deleted account found from
58 scanned users from this group 🚫👻Forwarded from #TBOT: Take Back Our Tech
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
⚡ The Hidden Cost of Convenience
Windows is pushing users toward the cloud—without asking. Your files, your settings, your digital life moved and managed remotely, often without your explicit consent. Add to that the constant stream of forced updates, and you’ve got a system that prioritizes control over user rights. Convenience might feel smooth, but it comes with serious risks when corporations decide what happens to your data.
📺 This clip is from our webinar *What’s Your Privacy Score?* — catch the full replay here!
—
🫶 @takebackourtech
🎥 VIDEOS| 📩 NEWSLETTER | XMPP | SUBSTACK
Windows is pushing users toward the cloud—without asking. Your files, your settings, your digital life moved and managed remotely, often without your explicit consent. Add to that the constant stream of forced updates, and you’ve got a system that prioritizes control over user rights. Convenience might feel smooth, but it comes with serious risks when corporations decide what happens to your data.
📺 This clip is from our webinar *What’s Your Privacy Score?* — catch the full replay here!
—
🫶 @takebackourtech
🎥 VIDEOS| 📩 NEWSLETTER | XMPP | SUBSTACK
Again...the air gap with Elon and PDJT was necessary....
Yes, Starlink phones—or more accurately, Starlink’s direct-to-cell service—are coming soon. Here's the latest:
📅 Timeline & Rollout
1. Text-only beta, using standard LTE phones, launched in 2024:
SpaceX deployed the first six “direct-to-cell” satellites in January 2024, capable of basic SMS texting directly to unmodified smartphones .
Text messaging via satellite began rolling out in that same year .
2. Voice & Data services expected in 2025:
Starlink’s roadmap indicates text in 2024, voice and data in 2025 .
🚀 Current Availability
T-Mobile is actively running a free beta through July 2025 in the U.S.:
Initially limited to text messaging, with voice and data on the roadmap .
Works on most phones from the past four years, though there are some exceptions (like OnePlus, Xiaomi, and older Motorola models) .
Supports iPhone 14+, Pixel 9, and recent Samsung devices .
🌐 What to Expect
Coverage expands beyond the U.S. with partnerships underway in Canada, Japan, Australia, and more .
Beta extensions:
iPhone 13 and newer (including Mini, Pro, Pro Max) can now access the service in the U.S. .
Speed & performance:
Limited to around 2–4 Mbps total per “cell” area—enough for texting now; voice and data coming later .
✅ Summary
Text-messaging via Starlink is available now in beta on newer phones.
Voice and data functionalities should arrive in 2025.
Broad rollout likely by late 2025 into 2026, as more satellites reach orbit and the service gains FCC approvals—and more carriers join globally.
Yes, Starlink phones—or more accurately, Starlink’s direct-to-cell service—are coming soon. Here's the latest:
📅 Timeline & Rollout
1. Text-only beta, using standard LTE phones, launched in 2024:
SpaceX deployed the first six “direct-to-cell” satellites in January 2024, capable of basic SMS texting directly to unmodified smartphones .
Text messaging via satellite began rolling out in that same year .
2. Voice & Data services expected in 2025:
Starlink’s roadmap indicates text in 2024, voice and data in 2025 .
🚀 Current Availability
T-Mobile is actively running a free beta through July 2025 in the U.S.:
Initially limited to text messaging, with voice and data on the roadmap .
Works on most phones from the past four years, though there are some exceptions (like OnePlus, Xiaomi, and older Motorola models) .
Supports iPhone 14+, Pixel 9, and recent Samsung devices .
🌐 What to Expect
Coverage expands beyond the U.S. with partnerships underway in Canada, Japan, Australia, and more .
Beta extensions:
iPhone 13 and newer (including Mini, Pro, Pro Max) can now access the service in the U.S. .
Speed & performance:
Limited to around 2–4 Mbps total per “cell” area—enough for texting now; voice and data coming later .
✅ Summary
Text-messaging via Starlink is available now in beta on newer phones.
Voice and data functionalities should arrive in 2025.
Broad rollout likely by late 2025 into 2026, as more satellites reach orbit and the service gains FCC approvals—and more carriers join globally.