Does turning on two-factor protect from social engineering? Unless the customer service rep asks you to provide a code from your device when chatting, two-factor is useless in the situation from the article above.
Does turning on two-factor protect from social engineering? Unless the customer service rep asks you to provide a code from your device when chatting, two-factor is useless in the situation from the article above.
the news reports were pretty ridiculous. made it sound like all hell was breaking loose and insane arctic storm face pounding winds... but i walked half a mile to my brooklyn grocery with no problem with a hood on, and called my parents in DC and my dad was actually driving my mom to her nightshift. His comment? “It’s…
Yep. That’s a fair amount of snow for those areas.
Not to downplay the storm, which was catastrophic in many places, but that image is a bit misleading simply because you can’t tell the difference between <1" (here in MA north of Boston) and multiple feet.
I can’t think of a single good reason to live in Michigan. Unless you’re a poisoned water enthusiast.
Don’t be that guy. I grew up in Rochester, NY. Cities like DC, NYC, Baltimore, Philly, and Boston aren’t built like those places, nor should they spend the money for services on a 1-in-100 year storm.