Friday, September 10, 2021
SNOOPERVISION: Facebook Sunglasses with A Built-In Camera {What You Can't Do Wearing Them)
Facebook Says It Violates The Terms Of Service Of Their New Snoopervision Glasses If You Cover The 'I'm Recording You' LED
from the like-that'll-work depth
Fri, Sep 10th 2021 12:06pm — Mike Masnick
The appearance of Eastman's cameras was so sudden and so pervasive that the reaction in some quarters was fear. A figure called the "camera fiend" began to appear at beach resorts, prowling the premises until he could catch female bathers unawares.
One resort felt the trend so heavily that it posted a notice:
"PEOPLE ARE FORBIDDEN TO USE THEIR KODAKS ON THE BEACH." Other locations were no safer.
> For a time, Kodak cameras were banned from the Washington Monument.
> The "Hartford Courant" sounded the alarm as well, declaring that "the sedate citizen can't indulge in any hilariousness without the risk of being caught in the act and having his photograph passed around among his Sunday School children."
And, frankly, if someone wants to record people surreptitiously, there are tons of ways to do so today already that are a lot easier (and often a lot cheaper) than an ugly pair of sun glasses. I think the bigger issue in the long run is going to be coming up with a new set of social norms and social cues for what is and what is not appropriate here. But that's a debate for another day.
What amazes me about the rollout of Facebook's glasses is that they seem to think that they can stop people from covering the LED light that goes on when you're recording... by claiming that it's a terms of service violation.
That's what a Facebook VP told Buzzfeed writer Katie Notopoulos, whose article on the whole Facebook glasses thing is absolutely worth reading.
But this bit is just pure silliness and makes Facebook look ridiculous:
Although you can’t turn off the light on the glasses or through the app, I was able to do this the old fashion way: I put a tiny piece of masking tape over the LED light and colored the tape black with a Sharpie. It covered it up perfectly.
Sometimes to stop the creeps, you have to become...a creep.
Alex Himel, VP of AR at Facebook Reality Labs, informed me over a Zoom chat that taping over the LED light was a violation of the terms of service of the glasses, which prohibit tampering with the device. Be warned.
========================================================================
Yeah, that's not how any of this works.
Claiming that putting a piece of tape over a light is "tampering" that violates the terms is highly questionable. Second, thinking that that even matters is just exceptionally silly. If people want to cover the light, they'll cover the light. At least confront that head on rather than with a "ooooh, you'll break your warranty" kind of nonsense. But this is Facebook and Facebook is going to do Facebook type things and believe that the terms of service rules all.
Beyond the ridiculousness of this response, it drifts into right to repair territory and questions of ownership. Facebook has taken over enough of people's lives as is. They shouldn't be out there telling you what you can do with physical products you purchased, even if they're associated with the product.
Filed Under: cameras, glasses, led lights, ownership, privacy, ray ban stories, right to repair, stories, sunglasses, tape, terms of service
Companies: facebook, ray ban
Indefinite Plans Back-to-Office Return
A sign from Microsoft in the wake of the same decision from Apple
Thursday, September 09, 2021
Neo Resurrected in A Sequel Virtual Reality of The Matrix We Live In: Red Pill or Blue Pill
Blue-Pilled Keanu Reeves Plugs Back Into First ‘The Matrix Resurrections’ Trailer
In the trailer, released Thursday, Reeves has indeed returned after his character Neo’s death in the third film. But this time, he’s sporting a “John Wick”-style beard and has no memory of his long-waged battle against the robot overlords that have imprisoned mankind in a virtual reality.
Instead, Neo is just another guy in a tech-obsessed world existing on a steady diet of blue pills, seemingly supplied by a nefarious therapist played by newcomer Neil Patrick Harris. “I’ve had dreams that weren’t just dreams,” Neo tells his therapist in the trailer, as moments from previous films flash across the screen. “Am I crazy?”
Neo then has a meet-cute with Carrie-Ann Moss’ Trinity, who also looks very much alive. The two introduce themselves to each other seemingly for the first time in this universe, despite their epic love story in prior installments.
To the strains of Jefferson Airplane’s “White Rabbit,” Neo soon enough falls down the rabbit hole himself, as Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, playing a younger version of Laurence Fishburne’s bespectacled Morpheus, offers him a red pill to liberate his mind.
That’s when we’re treated to a showcase of gravity-defying action sequences, as Neo and company run up walls, race motorcycles and leap off buildings, all while being hunted by the franchise’s signature shape-shifting agents . . .
IT'S ALWAYS SOMETHING: Windows CVE-2021-40444 Zero-Day Vulnerability
This Internet Explorer MSHTML remote code execution vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2021-40444, was disclosed by Microsoft on Tuesday but with few details as it has not been patched yet.
Windows MSHTML zero-day defenses bypassed as new info emerges
- September 9, 2021
- 04:37 PM
- 1

New details have emerged about the recent Windows CVE-2021-40444 zero-day vulnerability, how it is being exploited in attacks, and the threat actor's ultimate goal of taking over corporate networks.
This Internet Explorer MSHTML remote code execution vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2021-40444, was disclosed by Microsoft on Tuesday but with few details as it has not been patched yet.
The only information shared by Microsoft was that the vulnerability uses malicious ActiveX controls to exploit Office 365 and Office 2019 on Windows 10 to download and install malware on an affected computer.
Since then, researchers have found the malicious Word documents used in the attacks and have learned new information about how the vulnerability is exploited.
Why the CVE-2021-40444 zero-day is so critical
Since the release of this vulnerability, security researchers have taken to Twitter to warn how dangerous it is even though Microsoft Office's 'Protected View' feature will block the exploit.
When Office opens a document it checks if it is tagged with a "Mark of the Web" (MoTW), which means it originated from the Internet.
If this tag exists, Microsoft will open the document in read-only mode, effectively blocking the exploit unless a user clicks on the 'Enable Editing' buttons.

As the "Protected View" feature mitigates the exploit, we reached out to Will Dormann, a vulnerability analyst for CERT/CC, to learn why security researchers are so concerned about this vulnerability.
Dormann told BleepingComputer that even if the user is initially protected via Office's 'Protected View' feature, history has shown that many users ignore this warning and click on the 'Enable Editing' button anyway.
Dormann also warns that there are numerous ways for a document not to receive the MoTW flag, effectively negating this defense.
"If the document is in a container that is processed by something that is not MotW-aware, then the fact that the container was downloaded from the Internet will be moot. For example, if 7Zip opens an archive that came from the Internet, the extracted contents will have no indication that it came from the Internet. So no MotW, no Protected View."
"Similarly, if the document is in a container like an ISO file, a Windows user can simply double-click on the ISO to open it. But Windows doesn't treat the contents as having come from the Internet. So again, no MotW, no Protected View."
"This attack is more dangerous than macros because any organization that has chosen to disable or otherwise limit Macro execution will still be open to arbitrary code execution simply as the result of opening an Office document." - Will Dormann
To make matters even worse, Dormann discovered that you could use this vulnerability in RTF files, which do not benefit from Office's Protected View security feature.
Inspired by @buffaloverflow, I tested out the RTF attack vector. And it works quite nicely.
— Will Dormann (@wdormann) September 9, 2021
WHERE IS YOUR PROTECTED MODE NOW? pic.twitter.com/qf021VYO2R
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