Nah, those get their own, unique set of security issues, discovered or otherwise. Hint: every firmware does.
Nah, those get their own, unique set of security issues, discovered or otherwise. Hint: every firmware does.
Sounds like a job for tin foil or parchment paper
The Stargate movie was good, but SG-1 far surpassed it.
The issue was never that it’d stop working completely. Instead, the API would limit the app once a certain number of requests happened, and charge for more. Since a lot of people use the app, there’s a lot of requests, and it stops working quickly unless the developer pays.
Now that the app has been pulled from the market and it broke for everyone, it sees very little use. The limit doesn’t get hit, and the app works. But if everyone starts using it again, it’ll break again.
Edit: Just for kicks, I downloaded it from apkmirror and tried it. I very quickly got the 429 error when the API key has hit the limit.
I accept it from the notification and it still comes back. This is for consent-o-matic. Idk, I’ll try again. Maybe this time it’ll work.
I’m having the same with an add on. I’ve just been dismissing it when it comes up and hoping a bug fix comes.
I’m in favor of using carbon-free energy sources to power plants that do carbon capture and manufacturer fuel from the captured carbon. This on top of using carbon-free energy sources for our other energy needs would lead to carbon in the atmosphere being reduced, at least temporarily.
That being said, I suspect those have even worse scalability.
I have my media on a disk separate from the rest of the VM. I set that disk to not be included in snapshots, then snapshot the VM before upgrades.
They were when the name was made, but due to changes in the manufacturing process, they aren’t anymore. The name stuck, though.
https://www.popsci.com/two-by-four-lumber-measurements-explained/
They could be requiring phishing-resistant MFA, which OTP is not
What math are you doing? I got 69% aye from the Democrats and 58% aye from the Republicans.
Republican: (126 ÷ (126 + 88 + 4)) * 100 = 57.80% Democratic: (147 ÷ (147 + 59 + 7)) * 100 = 69.01%
I wonder if they know that spot is prone to rust so that’s actually grease to help prevent it.
Idk but I wouldn’t risk it when it’s easy to encrypt stuff. Good security is done in layers.
What about a torrent? You’ll have to encrypt with 7zip or something to keep it secure, but that and qbitorrent will do the trick.
doesn’t allow you to do anything you can’t do without it.
That’s false. It allows you to not need a password to unlock the volume at boot.
Im really confused why people think TPM needs to be involved in anyway when using LUKS.
Because it’s convenient
The disk will be decrypted on boot, but then they’ll have to contend with needing a password to log in
You won’t be able to upgrade to new versions when the support contract runs out, but you can install updates to the existing version as long as updates are made for it. This has always been the lifecycle for perpetual licensing. It’s good forever, but at a certain point it becomes a security risk to continue using. The difference here is they won’t sell you another perpetual license when the lifecycle is up.
They’re terminating in the sense that they won’t sell it anymore. They’re not breaking the licensing they’ve already sold (mostly, there was some fuckery with activating licensing they sold through third parties)
I wouldn’t count on it