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The judge was “satisfied that the Doe defendants were given fair warning of the possibility that their personal information could be disclosed by Cogeco.”

The broadband outfit “provided the Doe defendants with first and second notices from (Hellboy Productions’) counsel which asserted (its) copyright in the work and alleged infringement of the work by the Doe defendants. The first notice advised of Cogeco’s obligation to retain records that will allow for the identification of the Doe defendants and the second notice warned of the plaintiff’s ability to make a formal legal request to Cogeco to compel the Doe defendants’ identity.”

First, the law firm sends them notices, giving them seven days to take the movie down and stop giving it away. If they comply, then typically nothing happens.

If they don’t stop, the firm issues a second notice indicating it reserves the right to sue the alleged movie pirates.




If (huge if!) those screen shots are legit, then Anydesk was storing passwords in cleartext or equivalent; many of them are far too random to be bruteforced so quickly.

The last one, where both the domain name and password start with QR, makes me think the screenshots might actually be legit.


>In light of this breach, AnyDesk customers must take proactive steps to protect their accounts and data. Password changes alone are insufficient.

Go figure :)


Seen on Breach Forums onion site as well ...


The ramifications of this breach are profound. Cybercriminals who gained access to the AnyDesk portal could glean valuable information about customers, including license keys, active connections, session durations, contact information, email addresses, and the number of managed remote access hosts, all with their online/offline status and IDs. Such details open up a plethora of malicious possibilities.

In light of this breach, AnyDesk customers must take proactive steps to protect their accounts and data. Password changes alone are insufficient. AnyDesk offers a whitelist feature, enabling users to specify who can connect to their devices, adding an extra layer of security. Multi-factor authentication (MFA) is strongly recommended to enhance account protection. Organizations should also monitor for any unexpected password and MFA changes, suspicious sessions, and emails referencing AnyDesk accounts from unknown sources.

https://securityonline.info/anydesk-breach-2024-dark-web-sal...





Bill 96 as the title implies.


Our political overlords only have the good of the many in mind.


This sounds a lot like HRM already on the market for sports and fitness activities. Garmin's actually works by calculating breaths rather than measuring them.

https://support.garmin.com/en-CA/?faq=2yEgS0Pax53UDqUH7q4WC6

There are cheaper alternatives if you go off-brand.


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