Today's issue of The Sizzle looks different than usual, doesn't it? I've moved off from ActiveCampaign to MailerLite and had to tweak the issue template due to how MailerLite handles "raw" HTML emails. It's a work in progress so will probably look slightly different tomorrow and maybe even the day after that while I do HTML email design by trial and error.
Binance, one of the world's largest cryptocurrency exchanges was hacked and 2 million "Binance Coins" (BNB) were minted out of thin air, worth up to US$550m. It seems that the hacker just generated their own money. Like someone breaking into the Note Printing Australia factory in Craigieburn and doing a cheeky print run of some $100 notes. Binance is now asking stakeholders (i.e: people that own BNB) if they should freeze the stolen tokens and if they should implement a bug bounty. Also in cryptocurrency land, the infamous Celsius Network exposed the names, home addresses, email addresses and recent transactions of all its customers in a court filing. Big brained geniuses.
Lufthansa has banned AirTags from their flights. I think. News spread around German media, then English media, that the airline has classified AirTags as "dangerous goods" according to the International Civil Aviation Organization, backed up by this tweet from Lufthansa's official account. However, when Airways magazine reached out to Lufthansa, they were told the airline has "not banned airtags and there is no guideline or regulation by Lufthansa to ban airtags. There is a standing ICAO regulation on such devices, but this has nothing to do with Lufthansa or any other carrier". Okay then, that cleared things up, thanks Lufthansa.
In the wake of Optus getting cyberowned, the government is thinking about turning myGov or myGovID into a "single digital identification service". They've told former Telstra CEO David Thodey to include this possibility in his massive review of myGov. The goal of such a system would be for businesses to check if a customer is who they say they are via myGov who hold this information securely (lol), instead of customers having to give this info to multiple companies each time they want to interact with them. It all sounds sensible at face value but you just know that in practice it'll be a shitshow.
There's probably a few of you reading this that record videos for work, most likely demos or tutorials on how to use something computer related. You might like an app called Recut. It automatically removes all the pauses in your videos. You can tell it how long of a silence to cut out and how much padding to add between the clips. Then you can import the edits into Davinci Resolve/Premiere/Final Cut Pro. I don't record or edit these types of videos but I thought it would be useful for those that do. It costs US$99 (once-off, but only 1 year of updates) and is on Mac and Windows.
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The Sizzle is created on Wathaurong land and acknowledges the traditional owners of country throughout Australia, recognising their continuing connection to land, water and community. I pay my respect to them and their cultures and to elders both past and present.