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Hey, it doesn’t look obfuscated to me?
Hey, it doesn’t look obfuscated to me?
Really?
hunter12
Recurring incidents like these raise the question, how does one strike a balance?
Relentlessly reporting theoretical vulnerabilities can leave open-source developers, many of who are volunteers, exhausted from triaging noise.
On the flip side, would it be ethical if security practitioners, including novices, sat on what they thought was a security flaw—so as not to inconvenience the project maintainers?
This was already answered in the article: verify your security findings. Make a POC that actually exploits the vulnerability, then submit it with your report.
I like getting Bee-link boxes - they can be upgraded to 64gb RAM, have plenty of CPU, and can have two drives. I run Proxmox on them and make VMs that then run my services in docker.
There’s been a lot of talk about N100s as well. I haven’t looked into them much, but I assume they should be similar. Looks like their max memory is 16gb. I’d stick with Bee-link.
Okay, I actually do need to seek. However, something about going out over bluetooth instead of over the headphone jack has made it work, so… no idea, but there you go. (Or maybe it’s something else that I did, but, either way, it’s working, so… cool.)
Here’s the thing, though: it’s doesn’t matter if free will is real or not.
I wouldn’t bet on myself for a quiz about anything.
In addition to what everyone else in this thread has already covered, the credit card issuers benefit from you having that card in your wallet because they charge the merchant for every transaction. So you’re having the merchant pay the credit card company with every swipe, in exchange for whatever benefits the card provides to you.
I’m in this comment.
Did not work. Thank you for the suggestion, though!
Good news is, for this project, I just learned I can avoid having to do this, so… at least that’s something.
And you can self host it!
Also as a side note I hate how lots of places just assume you want to download their shitty spyware ridden apps or hand over your phone number or an email.
Or want notifications. No, recipe site, I don’t want desktop notifications from you.
If you’re not paying for a service, you’re likely being monetized by watching ads or providing personal data to companies that don’t necessarily have your best interests at heart.
This is a bit out of date. Nowadays, you pay for the service and are monetized by watching ads and providing personal data to companies that definitely don’t have your best interests at heart.
Or let your password manager do it for you.
I bought myself a raspberry pi for my birthday a few years ago.
I now have thousands of dollars in hardware sitting in a server rack in my office. Whoops.
Looks like it’s mostly for live TV? I haven’t had cable in a long time, don’t really need to record things.