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count_dongulus , to showerthoughts in Glass buildings are brutalism but for capitalism

… what? They could have more art or variation on the exterior, but the glass lets in maximum light to occupants specifically so the building doesn’t feel confined and dark. You can typically see inside at ground level. The upper mirroring is to improve energy efficiency so it doesn’t act like a greenhouse.

snooggums , to mildlyinfuriating in I started to get these daily at random hours, even when I'm sleeping. Someone's trying to hack me?
@snooggums@midwest.social avatar

Do you have 2 factor authentication set to be sent to email? If not, it is definitely phishing but unfortunately they might be able to spoof an official microsoft email account.

Is the “Microsoft account team” email coming from an official email account? If not, it is definitely phishing and you can block the address and report as spam/phishing.

cashmaggot , to showerthoughts in Glass buildings are brutalism but for capitalism

So tired of all these buildings, that look the same inside and out. I really love the small details that reigned throughout older architecture. Not sure when they dipped out, but probably in the 70s? I am going to guess a lot of the handiwork I've admired is probably from the 1930s and before. But also I am not in Europe, I am in America. So I only know the architecture inspired by the og stuff (because I haven't been yet, but will go someday I'd imagine - health and $$$ permitting). I actually do like some post-modern stuff very much. I am not sure what these new complexes are in style, but they're like...capitalist modern. They feel soulless, tacky, and outright awful. People applaud them for adding multi-unit living spaces to cities, but who can afford to live there? And renting them feels like Russian Roulette thanks to market priced leasing. Eh. EH! Getting grumpy thinking about it.

So let's talk about these cool cat styles I've seen. American gothic styles, everything feels like your soul is damned and those little gargoyles are coming to get you. Choice! Neo-classical, where am I - in ROMA!? Marble, nice shiny and smooth marble. Don't like it on kitchen countertops, but man it's some kind of beautiful on monuments and other important buildings. Plus you feel like you're tap dancing 24/7. Art deco - man how these buildings take up space. I once seen a custom built art deco house that made me want to slap somebody cause it was so beautiful. Took a picture and I still have that mugger fugger where as so many have fallen off. Dream house! Dream style. Some kinda wonderful. Everything looks like the Emerald City. This style knows how to command space. And nothing needs to be this extravagant, but it is. And I like that. It's kinda like - you smell the cologne/perfume on this one. It's ritzy. Hell it might have literally been the reason for the invention of the word. Classy!

I like Prairie school stuff too but it's just kinda like if you took Japanese architecture and smashed it together with post-modern ideas. Eh! It's cool though.

Also I've always figured that if we're nature infinitely attempting to recreate itself - that buildings are just like...trees/hollows. So we're just making a bunch of steel trees. Meh!

Enjoy this word diarrhea. Enjoy it good.

LaserTurboShark69 , to mildlyinfuriating in I started to get these daily at random hours, even when I'm sleeping. Someone's trying to hack me?

I’ve gotten a bazillion of these in the past couple years. According to Microsoft I can safely ignore it so I guess I’ll just do that since I’m not sure what else to do about it.

CaptainBasculin , to asklemmy in What is the best low MB mobile game that you ever played ?

By most played it’s Drop Wizard Tower. It’s 65MB, a consistent 15 minute time waster for me. Not the best game; but i kept playing it ever since I broke the world record for fastest climb to the top. I still try to beat my old time; don’t have much luck though.

By best; easily Tap Tap Revenge 3. I remember playing that game on my iPod Touch 2 with 8GB of memory, it should be taking a low filesize. Too bad the game’s delisted on stores, there will never be a rhythm game that good for mobile ever again. Fuck you disney for buying out Tapulous and doing absolutely nothing with them.

Mango , to mildlyinteresting in These mouth guards are flavored?

hides the strawberry lube

Yeah man, really weird.

Cethin ,

You should use the strawberry lube with peanut butter flavored condoms.

sheepishly , to programmer_humor in When your shower uses GitHub more than you

This shower is more employable than I am

MajorHavoc ,

That shower is more employable than most of us.

But I also bet it’s under-paid because it hasn’t learned to set boundaries.

Or it’s an epic hobbyist.

possiblylinux127 , to mildlyinfuriating in I started to get these daily at random hours, even when I'm sleeping. Someone's trying to hack me?

Change your password to a randomly generated password and them setup 2FA

Do not click on anything in the emails as they may be phishing attempts

intensely_human ,

Just to be clear, change your password by manually typing in the address of the service in question.

Do not use the link in the email to navigate to the service for password changing.

MajorHavoc , (edited ) to mildlyinfuriating in I started to get these daily at random hours, even when I'm sleeping. Someone's trying to hack me?

If it keeps happening, prefers middle of the night (to where you live) hours, and you often get a really big batch in a row, then yes, it’s probably an attempted hack.

In any case, I would making sure your password is strong and isn’t reused anywhere else, and set up multi factor authentication…

Edit: It was pointed out to me that this has an approve/deny on it. Looks an awful lot like an MFA Fatigue attack. The attacker plans to keep doing it until you slip up and approve it accidentally while fumbling to unlock your phone at midnight sometime.

You should change your password immediately, if you haven’t already.

Weird. Sure looks like MS may be sending these without requiring your password. That’s…not great. Because of the fatigue attack aspect. See what you can configure. I would disable this function on my account, if I could.

Again, that’s if you’ve gotten dozens of these. If you got 3, it’s someone who mistyped their email as yours.

RestrictedAccount ,

The message is multi-factor

MajorHavoc ,

Oh, I missed that in the gutter of the message.

This is a common attack tactic, then, called MFA Fatigue. It also means they probably have Ops password already. Or Ops service provider is doing something dumb. (MFA requests shouldn’t be sent out without the other factor being known.)

Krauerking , to science_memes in Every part of the foxglove is poisonous. It'll literally stop your heart.

People freak out when you point out their yew bush is super poisonous.
Like, I’m the bad guy for knowing that it only takes like 50 grams of leaves to kill a person and their is no antidote.

ricecake , to mildlyinfuriating in I started to get these daily at random hours, even when I'm sleeping. Someone's trying to hack me?

It is actually safe to ignore them. It means either someone has an email address similar to yours, or a bot of some sort has you email address and only your email address.

Essentially, someone or something goes to the login screen, enters your login, and says “I don’t have the password, let me in!”.
Sending a code to your email like this is the first step in letting someone in without the password, or more specifically to having them reset it.

Since the email is to check “did you ask for this?”, doing nothing tells them that you did not.

If you want some extra peace of mind: account.live.com/Activity should show you any recent login activity which you can use to confirm that no one has gotten in.

Also, use two factor, a password manager, and keep your recovery codes somewhere safe. The usual security person mantra. :)

ech ,

This is all good information and seems well intentioned, but it’s worth pointing out in a post about account security that clicking links provided by others and giving it your login information is very unwise (even/especially links in emails like these). For the link you provided, it’d be better to recommend going through a primary microsoft page or login that can be confirmed by the user and getting to the activity history page from there

ricecake ,

That is wonderful advice and I’m glad you pointed that out. :)

If I knew how to give directions to the page, I would, but unfortunately I don’t know the Microsoft site layout, only the URL that their help center directed to.

In mitigation of my indiscretion: it’s generally safer to trust a person you approach out of nowhere than to trust someone who approaches you out of nowhere.
Since they chose the venue and asked the question, the likelihood that an attacker is present in the replies is lower than the expectation that an unsolicited email is from an attacker.

But it’s also entirely correct to be distrustful of anything anyone asks you to click on, triply so if it involves security or login pages.

OfficerBribe ,

For MS guides there usually is an article under support.microsoft.com or learn.microsoft.com (usually more advanced, admin related documentation for company / enterprise level stuff) domains. Here’s an article for checking activity.

eezeebee OP ,
@eezeebee@lemmy.ca avatar

Also, use two factor, a password manager, and keep your recovery codes somewhere safe. The usual security person mantr

Well, I found the recent activity and none of these were me. At least they all appear to say Unsuccessful sign-in.

https://lemmy.ca/pictrs/image/ba2deda6-50ec-4827-9c0e-5e1ec17ada7d.png

ricecake ,

Yup, that would indicate that likely a bot is trying to guess it’s way in.

You are still safe.

The only weird thing here is that Microsoft lets such things bother you instead of guessing that you didn’t teleport to Brazil and instead putting a little extra burden on the Brazil end before sending you an email.

If you’re still feeling worried, the biggest thing you can do is enable two-factor auth (which you should do anyway), or even better: enable something like passkeys which are very secure and also easier than username/password.

Two-factor/password manager is the “remember to brush and floss” of the security industry, so… Please do those things. :)

skullgiver ,
@skullgiver@popplesburger.hilciferous.nl avatar

Change your password. When they get to the “provide a token” part of the login, they’ve already guessed your password correctly.

Set up non-email 2FA as well if you haven’t already.

hinterlufer ,

You can create an email alias for your Microsoft account and then only enable login from that account. If you then do not use that email for anything but the login, you should be pretty safe from credential stuffing attacks.

I had a very similar issue with multiple failed login attempts and changing my login email stopped it right away.

creditCrazy ,
@creditCrazy@lemmy.world avatar

Considering most of the attempts are from India and Brazil I suspect a service you signed up for has sold your email to unsavory data brokers and now a bunch of scam companies are doing that MFA attack on you

kubica , to programmer_humor in When your shower uses GitHub more than you

Plot twist, all of those are project initial commits.

CanadaPlus ,

Oh no. I think just reading that idea gave me cancer.

Keep your unfinished project ideas in a folder of shame like everyone else.

kernelle ,

How else do you suppose I store my API keys?

narc0tic_bird ,

My GitHub pretty much is my folder of shame.

ILikeBoobies , to lemmyshitpost in Twitter

I’ll call it twitter until twitter.com is a different website

FMEEE ,

He fired to much people to recode every single dependency.

clark , to piracy in 90s Classic
@clark@midwest.social avatar

What’s the name of this video again? I remember having to watch it before every movie on a scrappy little DVD-player laptop.

Bougie_Birdie ,
@Bougie_Birdie@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

This is a mutation of an anti-piracy campaign. The text usually reads “You wouldn’t steal a car” an then asks why you would download a movie.

I would totally download a car though.

ptc075 , to showerthoughts in If malls continue to shut down and decay over the next twenty years, someone should turn them into retirement communities for GenX and Millennials.

Maybe 10 or so years ago, was a real push to convert old malls into apartments or low income housing. Turns out it’s not that easy. Those buildings were built with minimal plumbing, just a few public restrooms and limited water service for the food court. There’s just not enough water/sewer to supply more than a small handful of apartments. You’d have to tear up significant portions of the building to run all new plumbing for all the kitchens & bathrooms. And that assumes the underlying city infrastructure that runs to the mall could even support the new water & sewage demands in the first place.

I’ll grant you, it is a cool idea. It’s just not nearly as simple as it sounds.

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