Need plenty of room for their crystal balls.
openpgp4fpr:358e81f6a54dc11eaeb0af3faa742fdc5afe2a72
Need plenty of room for their crystal balls.
Untrue. I work for a global enterprise company that transacts hundreds of millions of dollars via LE certs.
SELinux
The reason is “asymmetric routing”. The return ping packets are traveling a different route on the way out than on the way back.
This implies they’re storing the plaintext password.
Ideally the password would be hashed with a salt and then stored. Then it’s a fixed length field and it shouldn’t matter how long the password is.
The execute bit on directories allows for traversal of the directory (i.e. allows you to cd
in), while the read bit allows for listing the directory contents (e.g. ls
).
Have some commas, my man: ,
Does for me.
Yes but it’s hard work.
I did it from the other side of the planet. I accidentally ran an rm -rf ...
command on a running system. Luckily I had an identical system running that I could use to copy over the files, devices, etc.
Learning about inodes and /proc/xxx/fd
works, I was able to recover enough files to then copy over the rest from the other system.
Doing it over SSH from the other side of the world was a tough 14 hours.
Simple Contacts works well.
Luckily I signed up with fake details (name, address, etc.).