![]() Most tech people who use crypto use a hardware wallet, most banks today will get you your money back (although the merchant ends up losing money if not insured) + you can just limit your card spending if not planning a big buy, and ransomware is a non issue for me since I keep everything important on a couple external disks. Hackers just want money and it's honestly a numbers' game. Most non targeted viruses will just wait for you to copy paste some crypto private keys or credit card numbers, or encrypt your files and ask for a ransom. Meh you probably are if you're like me, a nobody. That seems like very poor risk assessment to me. ![]() Or you can just follow the recall procedure, which is a bit inconvenient but it seems much less inconvenient than facial reconstruction.Īnd if you don’t care about your data being compromised and sold to bad actors, who may then steal your identity and cause a LOT of trouble for you, then by all means run known-insecure software. So yeah, you can drive around with your faulty airbag if the possibility of getting your face mangled doesn’t bother you. ![]() One recent iOS update that comes to mind is one that patched an issue where a PDF sent via iMessage could give remote code execution with no user interaction or visibility. If you follow the discussion in the info sec community surrounding these updates, often the vulnerabilities that are patched are being actively exploited. This is actually a great analogy now, because Apple (or whoever) regularly issue “recalls” for their known-insecure software in the form of software updates. (A real issue that many manufacturers had to issue a recall for.) The weblink in the browser shows this escaping: which matched what my script came up with Wreck%20of.No, it’s like driving a car whose airbag is known to have a fault that will send shards of material into the driver’s face in the event of an accident. Three tests 2nd with extra tabs, white space, etcĪctually I just tested it by using Spotify Web and pasting in the search: Wreck of. Set aEscapeString to (aString's stringByAddingPercentEncodingWithAllowedCharacters:aCharSet) Set aCharSet to NSMutableCharacterSet's new()ĪCharSet's formUnionWithCharacterSet:(NSCharacterSet's URLQueryAllowedCharacterSet())ĪCharSet's formUnionWithCharacterSet:(NSCharacterSet's URLPathAllowedCharacterSet()) ![]() StringByTrimmingCharactersInSet:(NSCharacterSet's whitespaceAndNewlineCharacterSet)) Set aCleanString to (aNoWhiteSpaceString's ¬ trim any head or tail whiteSpace or newLines StringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:aPattern withString:" " options:(NSRegularExpressionSearch) range:(current application's NSMakeRange(0, aString's |length|))) Set aPattern to (NSString's stringWithString:"[\\s| Set aString to NSString's stringWithString:aQuery Set aEscaped3 to my escapeSearch:aCleaned3 Set aCleaned3 to my cleanSearchString:aQuer圓 Set aEscaped2 to my escapeSearch:aCleaned2 Set aCleaned2 to my cleanSearchString:aQuery2 Set aQuery2 to " Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald Set aEscaped1 to my escapeSearch:aCleaned1 ![]() Set aCleaned1 to my cleanSearchString:aQuery1 Set aQuery1 to "Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald Property NSRegularExpressionSearch : a reference to 1024 Property NSMutableCharacterSet : a reference to current application's NSMutableCharacterSet Property NSCharacterSet : a reference to current application's NSCharacterSet Property NSString : a reference to current application's NSString Here’s quickTests I did with AppleScript to solve (I can convert to Objective-C for anyone) use AppleScript version "2.4" - Yosemite (10.10) or later What needs to be tackled is the newLine and extraWhite space needs to be removed first So I just tested NSString's stringByAddingPercentEncodingWithAllowedCharacters:NSCharacterSet.URLQueryAllowedCharacterSetĪnd while it does find the lineFeed/newLine as illegal. ![]()
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