Question diggers (all LB)
>>7585524 , >>7586010, >>7586031 COUQ Foundation: Same address as CEMEX
Is this the address of a registered agent to handles hundreds of businesses from a single office? That's a very common arrangement.
Question diggers (all LB)
>>7585524 , >>7586010, >>7586031 COUQ Foundation: Same address as CEMEX
Is this the address of a registered agent to handles hundreds of businesses from a single office? That's a very common arrangement.
Did they ever correct the page header either? With the incorrect and missing links?
'We Tested Ring's Security. It's Awful'
https://it.slashdot.org/story/19/12/21/1724230/we-tested-rings-security-its-awful
"Ring lacks basic security features, making it easy for hackers to turn the company's cameras against its customers," reports Motherboard: Ring is not offering basic security precautions, such as double-checking whether someone logging in from an unknown IP address is the legitimate user, or providing a way to see how many users are currently logged in – entirely common security measures across a wealth of online services… Ring doesn't appear to check a user's chosen password against known compromised user credentials. Although not a widespread practice, more online services are starting to include features that will alert a user if they're using an already compromised password…. Motherboard deliberately entered the wrong password to our account on the login portal while connecting from the Tor anonymity network dozens of times in quick succession. At no point did Ring try to limit our login attempts or present a captcha…. Ring does offer two-factor authentication, where a user is required to enter a second code sent to them as well as their password, but Ring does not force customers to use it. Motherboard verified that Ring's two-factor authentication does work as advertised, but multiple people who were logged into the app didn't have to log back in after it was enabled – Ring didn't eject them nor ask them to enter a two-factor token… From a smartphone app, someone who is logged in can watch live and historical footage, listen through the camera's microphone, speak through the camera's speaker, play an alarm, see the name of the specific Wi-Fi network the camera is connected to, see the address the user originally registered the Ring camera with, see the phone number a user has entered into the app, and see nearby crime "incidents." This shows the specific, user-selected home address plotted on a map. Ring requires that a user input a home address to set up the camera.
It's the 4th or 5th time I've reiterated the request over a period of days. A Baker decided to put it in Global Notables too and it's been there for days now.
No one's minding the store.
Or if they are, it's deliberate ignoring.