What is Hackers' Pub?

Hackers' Pub is a place for software engineers to share their knowledge and experience with each other. It's also an ActivityPub-enabled social network, so you can follow your favorite hackers in the fediverse and get their latest posts in your feed.

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supports a lot of foundational technologies that are widely used. Did you know that libxml2 is in every smart tv for the past 15 years?

If you are a company or individual that uses libxml2, consider donating to the GNOME Foundation so we can help make maintenance of these software sustainable for everyone to use.

donate.gnome.org/

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In September, I distilled some of my decade-plus experience in investigating and reporting data breaches to help you read, understand, and critically analyze a data breach notification.

This blog cuts through the legal lingo and jargon so that you can know what actions to take to protect yourself.

this.weekinsecurity.com/how-to

One of the most important tools you can use on the internet to protect yourself from online security and privacy threats is… an ad-blocker.

In this deep-dive (and one of my favorites), I explain how ad blockers defend against surveillance and malware. I also have plenty of ad blocker suggestions for you to consider!

this.weekinsecurity.com/why-ad

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They were many. Not just rulers, but households, elders, children—lives lived inside systems of memory, labor, belief, and power that did not require a single name. So, to say “Africa is a country” is not a cartographic error. It is the residue of training—what remains after empire leaves but its grammar stays.

Africa moved as many worlds. It still does.

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Image: Map of the ethnic diversity of Africa, overlaid with country borders. Source: National Geographic.

A satellite-style map of Africa overlaid with modern national borders and filled with hundreds of irregular, multicolored regions. The dense patchwork of colors subdivides the continent far beyond state boundaries, suggesting ethnic, linguistic, or cultural groupings rather than countries. Surrounding oceans are dark blue, emphasizing the contrast between Africa’s political borders and its complex internal diversity. From National Geographic.
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I like having the shape of things memorized. I like being fluent in the codebases I work on. human memorization works via repeated exposure. it's fine to automate certain things (so long as the automation tool is deterministic) but do it with the awareness that you'll lose the opportunity to become good and knowledgable about something through your menial interactions with it

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This is a camera photo of a YouTube Short I published, playing back on my TV's YouTube app.

I do not look like this. I don't look this young and I'm not trying to. My face isn't remotely this smooth. My skin has blemishes, and freckles. My eyebrows are coarser.

YouTube's stupid AI upscaler has clearly made a pass, and I dislike it. I dislike it very much.

Man with gray beard wearing a headset and a black "Linux For Everyone" T-shirt, seated in a living room with framed landscape art behind him.
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Man pages are divided into section depending on topic. There are 9 different
sections numbered from 1 (General Commands) to 9 (Kernel Developer's Manual).
You can get an introduction to each topic by typing

man <number> intro

In other words, to get the intro to general commands, type

man 1 intro

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They were many. Not just rulers, but households, elders, children—lives lived inside systems of memory, labor, belief, and power that did not require a single name. So, to say “Africa is a country” is not a cartographic error. It is the residue of training—what remains after empire leaves but its grammar stays.

Africa moved as many worlds. It still does.

1/ 7

Image: Map of the ethnic diversity of Africa, overlaid with country borders. Source: National Geographic.

A satellite-style map of Africa overlaid with modern national borders and filled with hundreds of irregular, multicolored regions. The dense patchwork of colors subdivides the continent far beyond state boundaries, suggesting ethnic, linguistic, or cultural groupings rather than countries. Surrounding oceans are dark blue, emphasizing the contrast between Africa’s political borders and its complex internal diversity. From National Geographic.
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Hello cyber friends! There's no this.weekinsecurity.com newsletter today (I'm off for the holidays). But if you're a fan of my weekly dispatch (and now blog!), please consider a paying subscription starting at $10/month for exclusive articles, analysis & more.

Here's what I've written about so far:

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