Let's Encrypt's scheme to encrypt the web is working out as planned [www.wired.com]
Nice!

Some errors are creeping up today which means mixed happenings.

Matthew Keys sentenced to 24 months under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act for his role in 2010 LA Times hack, must surrender to custody June 15, plans to appeal [motherboard.vice.com]
Absurd ruling, gets to show you the CFAA is a stupid law.

Animaniacs are reuniting on tour [nyti.ms]
this should be awesome.

Amazon Kindle Oasis: $290 [www.theverge.com]
Really? No thanks.

Washington Post sources: FBI did not use Cellebrite to crack San Bernardino iPhone, paid hackers for undisclosed software flaw that was used to create hardware to crack PIN [www.washingtonpost.com]
Settles that.

How skilled attackers are using newly evolved crypto-ransomware to turn every network intrusion into a potential payday [arstechnica.com]
Alarming, shows you you can't click on non-trust websites and then some.

@clarkgoble I agree, it's mostly like a companion to the iPhone and not a true standalone device. If it was like a Pebble or a Fitbit, then I would give it more of a chance. Unless Apple can break to standalone they'll be stuck.

@johngordon

Some software pieces aren't working well as it should so far today which means it's more work and effort.

Guardian tracked over 70 million comments since 2006. Unsurprisingly women and people of color writers and pundits mostly targeted [flip.it]