For starters, because .w is not a valid TLD, and j.w would be registered in about 50 milliseconds if it ever became one.
For starters, because .w is not a valid TLD, and j.w would be registered in about 50 milliseconds if it ever became one.
That one’s not really pasta, it’s rogersimon10:
https://cheezburger.com/7801861/19-times-the-dark-humored-jumper-cables-guy-trolled-reddit
NAT loopback, if supported and enabled, may appear to bypass firewall rules.
Basically, traffic to your public (WAN) IP that comes from inside the network is not subject to the same level of security as outside traffic would be. The last part of the parent comment didn’t quite make sense, though.
I block traffic to their domain on my firewall.
Seems only fair since I’ve been eating them my entire life.
Harvest for transplant whatever organs I haven’t managed to destroy and then put my ass in one of these. And if I am lucky enough to still have any money at all by then, please bury it in the Pacific Northwest.
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And no one’s questioning the supposed sorting of the entire database instead of just the contacts table?
Learning to harness that anxiety helps, too. It’s my fuel and my brakes at the same time.
So, 1TB only lasts you a month?
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I mean, aren’t most images from orbiters and space telescopes heavily processed before the public ever sees them?
There’s also a wide and endlessly customizable variety of web/mobile clients, something reddit will apparently never have again.
e: Federation is pretty cool, too.
The current thinking as I understand it is expiry policies make most types of accounts less secure because users just cycle through the same predictable pattern of adding increasing numbers of exclamation points or incrementing the last digit at each required password change, and if you require new passwords to be too substantially dissimilar from x number of previous ones then users can’t remember them at all. Policies that make people use minimally complex passwords because they have too many to remember and don’t understand how password managers work inevitably increase password reuse between services and devices which does the opposite of improving security. Especially with MFA enforced, which I’ve been known to do as aggressively as I can get away with, there’s just no sense in requiring regular password resets – as long as the password remains complex, unique, and uncompromised. I’m not a network security expert but I am responsible for managing these sorts of things in my role and that’s the rationale I use for the group policies in a typical customer’s environment.
I pasted this into a Word document and my laptop burst into flames.
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That’s because the new one is just the existing web app that loads inside an Edge instance so they were basically starting from scratch. I realized that when I discovered I couldn’t open the new version on my laptop that I had uninstalled Edge from.
Oh, and MS is killing the old version. Joy.
Reaches out just BEFORE the customer actually removes it. And that nervous smile doesn’t remotely look like genuine surprise.
I can’t get over the missed opportunity to call it CRAMM.
This is the way.
You can say piracy here, it’s a safe space. Or, ya know, porn.