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It's not staggering. I fully expect thousands of people to lose their IG accounts per day to other hacks before this bug. That's like 0.000001 percent of active users. It's a big platform with many people.

But totally Meta should pay. There's not many people to pay. They should sue.


Shows that there is demand for this. It works for me now btw.

Debris from what? Satellite debris get in that orbit?

Most of the things that will be a common danger (that is too small to track) are tiny pieces of stuff. Think paint chips and sand grain sized objects. These can be from things that came off rockets and ships, and things we've left behind like experiments and satellites. When these tiny things intercept you at many kilometers per second it can be dramatic.

Anything larger, say a lost screw driver, would punch thru the ISS like it wasn't even there leading to some ugly consequences.


I did an internship at NASA. What they told me is that anything larger than a golf ball they track while anything smaller than, I think they said a penny, is too small to do damage. The problem is debris that's in between the two. In that case they only get a relatively short warning (it's been a while but I think it was on the order of a couple hours).

The ISS can dodge debris by adjusting the height of its orbit.


Bits of spacecraft falling off (Challenger's windshield was famously cracked by a paint chip), debris from satellite collisions, even anti-satellite weapons tests.

Debris from space. Lots of rocks are constantly falling from space from all over. Sometimes they're big and make pretty lights in the sky as they fall, often they are practically invisible.

Seeing nothing wrong with it. If journalist follows inverted pyramid, it starts with crucial facts and at the end it can be mostly supplementary information. Seeing this is about "International Space Station", this adds context to why it is called "international" for an ordinary person.

Literally all the time in prior history, whenever people WITH power needed them to do smart stuff for them.

Who exactly is the implied underdog "you" that we so desperately want to win here-- do you mean those poor struggling $xx billion companies or current US government apparently beholden to them?

Let's not sell them short, they're closer to $xxxx billion.

Ubiquiti or Synology?

Neither, large Enterprise storage name where the prices start in the six figures for the smallest boxes.

Malicious is relative.

If you got infected by ransomware and someone wrote a virus that defeats the ransomware, the author of the ransomware will consider it malicious but you probably won't. The intent is not malicious if you consider the intent of someone susceptible to this is more malicious.

By this time they must be aware that LLMs are based on theft and usually GPL-violation. They knowingly continue to use them because I guess they hope this way they can hold on to their job longer than their more conscientious coworkers.


> The social component was meant to be socialising with friends and like-minded individuals.

That still exists. I know people who mostly use just that part and don't like to doomscroll. I also personally connected to new people through socials and these friendships are pretty strong.


What happens if you vibe code an entire hardware product?

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