jagged_circle
@jagged_circle@feddit.nl
- Comment on [deleted] 1 day ago:
Abomination. That shit should be banned. I report them to mods.
- Comment on Gaza is Palestinian, not Israeli, Tel Aviv must end war and leave: ex-Israel PM 1 day ago:
Was he the guy who pulled the settlers out of Gaza before?
- Comment on [deleted] 1 day ago:
Thats not politics. That’s news.
- Comment on [deleted] 1 day ago:
This is a link sharing platform. Primarily links to news articles.
Don’t conflate politics to reading the news. If you have no interest in reading the news, you probably shouldn’t be on a link sharing site.
- Comment on Florida bill requiring encryption backdoors for social media accounts has failed 1 day ago:
Some people use safes just to fireproof protect documents and never lock
- Comment on US popularity collapses worldwide in wake of Trump’s return 1 day ago:
How could it have gotten worse? Is it negative now?
- Comment on Here's the source code for the unofficial Signal app used by Trump officials 1 week ago:
Yeah. That’s the story.
We need to ensure the government only uses open source tools and we need more funding for security audits.
- Comment on CrowdSec vs Fail2Ban - What to use? 1 week ago:
Neither. Use wazuh. You’re welcome.
- Comment on Here's the source code for the unofficial Signal app used by Trump officials 1 week ago:
Probably they need a way to archive it where the used can’t enable or disable archiving
- Comment on Here's the source code for the unofficial Signal app used by Trump officials 1 week ago:
The government is buying it. And cryptocurrency companies. That’s a lot of money and a lot of eyes.
- Comment on Here's the source code for the unofficial Signal app used by Trump officials 1 week ago:
If its open source and audited, it doesn’t matter.
- Comment on Here's the source code for the unofficial Signal app used by Trump officials 1 week ago:
Apparently archives.
I guess its a legal requirement.
- Comment on [deleted] 1 week ago:
They’re not stupid; its not in docker. Check apt.
- Comment on [deleted] 1 week ago:
This technique is controversial because there is limited understanding of its complete effects on the marine ecosystem,[5] including side effects and possibly large deviations from expected behavior. Such effects potentially include release of nitrogen oxides,[6] and disruption of the ocean’s nutrient balance.[1] Controversy remains over the effectiveness of atmospheric CO2 sequestration and ecological effects.
Geoengineering is bullshit proposed by funding from fossil fuel companies so they can continue to pollute.
The solution is simple: make it illegal to pollute. Fine the companies responsible for their contributions to the climate catastrophe out of existence.
- Comment on [deleted] 1 week ago:
This is the solution. You drain it and sequester the carbon.
- Comment on [deleted] 1 week ago:
Line the plater with steel, and this is not a problem. Bonus: trees are dwarfs and don’t present risks of falling on structures in storms.
- Comment on [deleted] 1 week ago:
Oh thats why the box below it provides heating and cooling. Its powered by a gasoline generator.
- Comment on When society completely transitions to cash-less, what happens when the power goes down? End of the world? 1 week ago:
That will never happen
- Comment on When society completely transitions to cash-less, what happens when the power goes down? End of the world? 1 week ago:
Solar panels are enough for power during the day.
- Comment on When society completely transitions to cash-less, what happens when the power goes down? End of the world? 1 week ago:
Microgrids with solar panels on every residential home is key
- Comment on When society completely transitions to cash-less, what happens when the power goes down? End of the world? 1 week ago:
This is bullshit. Everywhere I was in Scandinavia, you could buy with cash. If one shop didn’t take cash, you just went across the street to the other that did.
Even Scandinavia isn’t stupid enough to become 100% cashless
- Comment on When society completely transitions to cash-less, what happens when the power goes down? End of the world? 1 week ago:
Fortunately this would never happen, for the reason you listed. Cash is king and always will be.
- Comment on When society completely transitions to cash-less, what happens when the power goes down? End of the world? 1 week ago:
This happened in Ukraine when they were attacked with a cyberweapon (NotPetya) by Russia in 2017
If you want to know what happens, I highly recommend listening to this episode of Darknet Diaries
- Comment on What is Docker? 1 week ago:
Containers have been around for decades. Look into lxc.
But for the best security, you want VMs. Look into proxmox.
- Comment on What is Docker? 1 week ago:
No. Its install the package with apt. Avoid docker completely.
If the docker image maintainer has a github, open a ticket asking them to publish a Debian package
- Comment on What is Docker? 1 week ago:
Oof, TLS isnt a replacement for signatures. There’s a reason most package managers use release sognstirse. x.509 is broken.
And, yes PGP has a WoT to solve its PKI. That’s why we can trust apt sigs and not docker sigs.
- Comment on What is Docker? 1 week ago:
PKI.
Apt and most release signing has a root of trust shipped with the OS and the PGP keys are cross signed on keyservers (web of trust).
DCT is just TOFU. They disable it because it gives a false sense of security. Docket is just not safe.
- Comment on What is Docker? 2 weeks ago:
Package managers like apt use cryptography to check signatures in everything they download to make sure they aren’t malicious.
Docket doesn’t do this. They have a system called DCT but its horribly broken (not to mention off by default).
So when you run
docker pull
, you can’t trust anything it downloads. - Comment on is walking away the best way to deal with a work clique? 2 weeks ago:
I think OP is a teenager working at Sonic. I doubt they have email or lead many complex projects
- Comment on What is Docker? 2 weeks ago:
You know it doesn’t verify any signature on download, right?