Honestly, ewaste center.
Not much an atom with a gig of ram can do.
Honestly, ewaste center.
Not much an atom with a gig of ram can do.
The game looks like a bad reaction to The Outer Worlds. Big B trying to up their once business partner who made New Vegas
I mean I’m not gonna ick their yum
… Ok.
You would know mate.
I’m not going to take Lemmy into the shower. What is this showerBeers?
Wake up, scroll Lemmy for a bit have a shower, then pretend to work for the next 8 hours.
It’s asking me for a password. OMG why doesn’t it know it’s me and do what I tell it.
I have been burnt too many times by vendor incompatibility at work to not read the manuals before deploying something.
Working in IT.
Tell the truth.
We will get lied to straight to our face and when proven they are lying they double down and get annoyed.
We don’t care that you spilt coffee on your keyboard, we just need to know it happened so we can get you a new one.
They got rid of that years ago though.
Do EV and OV certs actually provide additional useful? When was the last time you reviewed the certificate of a site you access for non work purposes?
They are bound by anti money laundering laws (AML) and are required to Know Your Customers (KYC).
https://support.kraken.com/hc/en-us/articles/know-your-customer-kyc-questionnaire
Yes it does compromise privacy because now when the exchange is asked who owns this wallet they have to hand your details to law enforcement.
Exchanges without KYC are getting rarer.
Doesn’t DoH and DoT completely kill this?
Might throw some off but that is NetBios and things will totally go for that because Windows is terrible for security.
All my stuff avoids anything below 1000 or that ends in 22 because most people will just go 2222 or 1022. pick a random number between 1001 and 65000
assuming they are not behind a CGN whitelisting your mates place should be OK. But I would also move SSH away from a well known port. In the event something happens to the whitelist, crawlers will not jump on you straight away.
In an absolute sense, yes a modem can spy on you by hijacking requests and redirecting them to controlled locations. We use TLS to prevent this, even stronger with technologies like HSTS.
Does this happen in real life though? More then you think, but less of an impact then you think.
Some US providers will hijack DNS requests and redirect them to their own DNS servers, but this can be solved with DOH or DOT.
TLS interception is a thing but it requires the device you are using (phone, PC, tablet, laptop) to have a root certificate installed that the ISP also controls. Almost all browsers will only install root certificates from root certificate providers with good standing and have no quarm in untrusing the root certificate if things go badly.
Windows can’t even get their own UI right.
Look at the win10 control panel. Nearly a decade later and we still have to use the classic control panel to change settings.
Let’s flip this question. Why do you think an organisation should get my data?
Are they reputable? Are they secure? Are they domiciled in my country and follow the laws of my country?
In the strictest sense, no.
In the abstract, yes. Lithium ion batteries can be pretty violent if abused. Remember the Samsung Note phones?