Phew. Glad that bug got papered over 9999 years ago, so we won’t have to deal with it.
Phew. Glad that bug got papered over 9999 years ago, so we won’t have to deal with it.
T-SHIRTS CARGO PANTS COMFORTABLE SOCKS COMFY SWEATERS PRACTICAL WALLETS T-SHIRTS CARGO PANTS COMFORTABLE SOCKS COMFY SWEATERS PRACTICAL WALLETS T-SHIRTS CARGO PANTS COMFORTABLE SOCKS COMFY SWEATERS PRACTICAL WALLETS
That wouldn’t stop a true ethical hacker
tbf, those systems are now effectively haunted
I guess mel isn’t going to use you for their self hosting needs either, then.
I like Square Home. It looks like the old Metro UI (lots of tiles), and has nice large touch targets. And it supports widgets.
It isn’t foss, sadly.
Software is too complicated to trust. Instead, like other posters have stated, try to work out the least risky storage mechanism.
I’d make that offline backups.
One of the problems with online forums for organizing is that it’s hard to naturally build an organizational structure. It’s possible, but I think it requires experienced organizers to start choosing collaborators from the userbase.
We haven’t seen a lot of organizing boiling out of the existing forums (Reddit, Facebook, blogs) and microblogging (Twitter) platforms. There have been a bunch of leaderless movements, like #metoo and BLM, but those have had a moment and then faded out. If they were effective tools for organizing, I would expect to see more organizations come out of them and persist.
Conversely, volunteer community organizations form all the time - people are physically situated near people experiencing similar problems who are invested in solutions they think will work for their community. In-person organization is self perpetuating in the sense that there is an inherent reward for having an effect.
I think it’s possible to use online tools to create a movement, but like the author of the article says, most of us spend our time posting and upvoting rather than doing something that will change policy.
when it comes to addressing the problems we face, no amount of posting or passive info consumption is going to substitute the hard, unsexy work of organizing.
The fediverse is great, but the problem is that it isn’t organizing. It isn’t mobilizing people to scare politicians and businesses into behaving better.
Where’s it going next?
( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
When you run httptap – <command>, httptap runs <command> in an isolated network namespace, injecting a certificate authority created on-the-fly in order to decrypt HTTPS traffic. Here is the process in detail:
In linux, there is a kernel API for creating and configuring network interfaces. Conventionally, a network interface would be a physical ethernet or WiFi controller in your computer, but it is possible to create a special kind of network interface called a TUN device. A TUN device shows up to the system in the way that any network interface shows up, but any traffic written to it will be delivered to a file descriptor held by the process that created it. Httptap creates a TUN device and runs the subprocess in an environment in which all network traffic is routed through that device.
Beijing has strengthened its trade agreements across Africa, South America and South East Asia. It is now the largest trading partner of more than 120 countries.
which is diametrically opposed to the 60’s and 70’s still post war boom(ers) …, when their own rent was either … cost them $200 a month and their University tuition another $500 a year
I think this is it. The cost of living was lower, so Boomers could get by without selling out. The attitude continued into the 1990s and early 2000s until it became harder and harder to lead a comfortable life on a modest paycheque.
It was shitty, but now we know what came next, so it seems less scary than our current uncertain future.
Hiding ideas in text so dense it requires a Babel fish to understand won’t bring many people with us.
Yeah. Despite the noise on Reddit, I suspect most of his base see what he and Musk are up to as a win.