Something I'm not understanding is how these payloads even get executed. In "First Stage" in Figure 3, it explains that the user is redirected to a Github repo and then the payload is downloaded, but how exactly does it go to the second stage from there? I would assume the user has to be dumb enough to double-click on the payload that got downloaded, but the article makes it sound like this all happens automatically after clicking the initial ad link
Yeah given Debian’s policy of “if that version doesn’t have liver spots yet, it’s not going in our distro”, their testing has been more stable than other distros’ stable in my experience
Weak, elitist take. No meaningful difference between “hearing” a book and “seeing” a book (it’s kinda weird putting a word in quotes that the OP didn’t even say)
I’ve always argued that putting condoms in locked shelves is pro-STD and pro-teen-pregnancy. The fact that you have to walk up to an employee, ask them to open the shelf for you, and have them stand there and watch as you grab a box of condoms has no doubt scared away numerous 16 yr olds when all they were trying to do was be safe.
What walled garden are you talking about? Exclusive games? Literally every console ever made has those.
Nintendo bad for making QoL console releases? Again, Nintendo is not the only company to do that. PS4/PS5 Pro, the recent Xboxes, etc
With emulators, they’re only trying to protect their current hardware. They’ve put basically zero effort into shutting down emulators for consoles they don’t sell anymore. Yeah, I’m with everyone else in wishing they didn’t shut down the switch emulators but it’s somewhat understandable that they’re trying to protect their revenue from hardware sales
I think you’re only counting punts and leaving out place kicks. Also, I watch the URC weekly and the commentators do indeed refer to it as football. Not often, I will say, but they definitely do occasionally
“Why do you call it ‘football’ when they use their hands?” is the least original, least funny joke you could possibly make to an American. Also, there are more kicks in an average American football game than there are in an average rugby game, and you guys call rugby “football”
Rollercoaster Tycoon 3 is already on the Switch and idk, as much as I love this series, playing on a controller just felt so much clunkier than mouse and keyboard.
But that’s probably just me. Still excited this game is getting new light
The “but muh types” criticism of Python has always been completely ignorant of the main use cases of Python. Like yeah, probably shouldn’t use it in avionics or medical devices. But scientific computing where you’re basically just using the interpreter as a calculator? You really only care about whether something’s an integer or not. Float vs. double isn’t gonna kill you
Something I'm not understanding is how these payloads even get executed. In "First Stage" in Figure 3, it explains that the user is redirected to a Github repo and then the payload is downloaded, but how exactly does it go to the second stage from there? I would assume the user has to be dumb enough to double-click on the payload that got downloaded, but the article makes it sound like this all happens automatically after clicking the initial ad link