They can just wait for someone to approve the pull request like everyone one else.
For anything important, use matrix instead of lemmy DMs.
They can just wait for someone to approve the pull request like everyone one else.
But even my current Xiaomi router with stock firmware creates hash mismatches using apt
That’s a huge fucking red flag and I would yeet any network equipment responsible for fudging such a thing.
Edit the sudoers file.
## user is allowed to execute halt and reboot
whateverusername ALL=NOPASSWD: /sbin/halt, sbin/reboot, /sbin/poweroff
A very absorbent towel like microfiber.
A powerful hair dryer (I prefer one with a cold setting as excessive heat damages my hair).
Takes about 5-10 minutes.
Yea, but if you have your own OC devastation, you can broadcast your gofundme scam or whatever.
Not for a company with 120 Billion profits.
deleted by creator
“HEY, I’M LOOKING FOR [hidden network name]”
Client devices can also do this all the time even when not in range, which basically broadcasts they’re looking for that network everywhere they go. That’s just asking for someone to setup a rogue access point.
“GIVE US ALL YOUR MONEY NOW OR WE ARE DRIVING YOU OFF THE GRAND CANYON"
Can I just skip straight to this part?
Probably something for @jerry@fedia.io
Yea but I didn’t realize the vaultwarden project didn’t also release client software.
I had looked into running my own vaultwarden, but without open source clients it’s maybe a bit moot. Although I guess the web interface can be considered a client, OS or browser integration is a convenient feature.
Vaultwarden ?
Edit: Nvm, that’s just the server part
Thanks, that’s an interesting read.
I know that’s one person’s opinion and not a thorough research, but that’s still plenty of red flags.
I’ve used the 100 searches in the free trial, thought the search was fine, better than Google’s these days. The subscription is a bit steep so I held off, kinda glad I did after digging more into this.
Having what little employees they have also make a mac-only browser, AI stuff and email that their user base doesn’t seem to want is all a bit weird.
Buying a t-shirt factory (wtf) with the money they could have used to potentially lower the subscription, but decided to burn through it to give out free t-shirts. That just screams narcissism-driven to me.
Their vague statements on privacy isn’t convincing at all.
Some variation of “we don’t care about your data” isn’t in any way compelling evidence that you care about protecting the privacy of said collected data.
In my opinion they lack focus, commitment and conviction into what I thought was their primary mission at first glance: being a privacy-focused no nonsense search engine.
Although that’s probably on me for reading what I wanted to see between the lines and that never was their stated mission, which would explain a lot.
RAM is cheaper than my time.
I kinda consider 32GB as a minimum for anyone working on my team.
.world has a bot that sends private messages to their users when mod actions are taken against their account.
In this case, OP posted something, it got removed, they got the message.
It’s not that they can’t post, it’s that they posted stuff that got manually removed.
Evidently they can post, because we’re all commenting under one such post.
It’s not that you can’t post because you’re a local user.
You did post there, it’s just that the community mod removed it because it didn’t belong in that community (their call not mine). This has nothing to do with being a local user.
It’s just that lemmy.world notifies their users about removals and bans. Whereas in general, you’d need to consult the modlog to know about it.
Yup.
This kind of spam has been going on for a while and is usually removed promptly.
Sorry, I think our local murder bot was offline at the time.
Anyway, they’ve since been banned along with a several alt accounts.
Don’t hesitate to report those if you see more.
Oh and I think we would rather not advertise their spam URL if you wouldn’t mind editing the link out from the quoted part.
Thanks,
The problem is there’s likely not a universal solution that’s guaranteed to clean everything in every case.
Cleaning specific logs/configs is much easier when you know what you’re dealing with.
Something like anonymizing a Cisco router config is easy enough because it folllows a known format that you can parse and clean.
Building a tool to anonymize some random logs from a specific software is one thing, anonymizing all logs from any software is unlikely.
Either way, it should always be double-checked and tailored to what’s being logged.
mTLS is great and it’s a shame Firefox mobile still doesn’t support it.