

We do, it’s just that those users will also often go “nah, I’m just joking!” then do some shit anyways.
We do, it’s just that those users will also often go “nah, I’m just joking!” then do some shit anyways.
A phone call or sms asking “hey where are you?” isn’t enough?
And they tried to steal money while claiming it was donations for content creators.
Law was in effect from yesterday, but that doesn’t mean stores have to wait for that day to implement it.
Dnsmasq is dependent on whatever DNS servers you provide it with for its data, so if those controlling those DNS servers get ordered to block something you experience that.
Unbound however does the same job as the DNS servers you would configure in Dnsmasq : when you do a DNS request, unbound goes to the root hint servers, then works its way down through the authorative DNS servers til it finds what you are requesting.
Well, this is selfhost, so why not do that and set up unbound to use?
Not sure about adguard, but unless you are running it with unbound or similar, you still have to point it at a DNS server someone else controls.
With unbound you go straight to the root hint servers.
Yes, in the number of licenses they will be better off.
But without business premium the loose entra id P1, so lots of functionality will be lost there, and they will loose the windows license premium has, meaning they will either have to buy windows licenses or switch to Linux to be compliant on their devices.
Yeah, commented on the sister thread of this over on the technology subreddit that this wouldnt be a default on feature, and probably be either something the meeting owner has to enable (or tenant admins set to enabled in a policy) or it will be part of sensitivity labels or DLP policies.
Instant downvote.
This case is just fantastic. Someone discovered Cached domain logins, something that has been around for years and years to solve an issue when networks were less stable and AD might not be available, and decided to make a stink about it, as if sysadmins aren’t already aware of it and know how to handle things like this.
Yeah, should be noted that bitlocker is only default enabled if you set windows up with a Microsoft account, since it then saves the recovery info on that account “in the cloud”.
If you set it up with a local account, you still need to enable it manually, so that you can save the recovery info somewhere else.
Instead of that, I much prefer “Find My Mouse” in PowerToys.
Let’s you double tap ctrl and it will darken the screen except a circle around the mouse.
Changing the cursor gives me flashbacks to the windows xp days when people were changing their cursors to fucking racecars and dinosaurs, usually getting malware in the process.
Because caddy has built in, and default enabled, SSL of all sites using letsencrypt, something nginx doesn’t have from what I can see.
Of course it affects the average user, if nothing else then by showing that the browser can’t be trusted.
If the people making the browser is willing to alter the Web pages people visit to steal money once, what makes you think they aren’t willing to do so again for any number of reasons?
It was a comment on your claim that brave is a great product.
Straight up scamming their users is in my opinion not something that is done by “great products”.
Other examples is that Web browser that added their own referral code when users bought stuff on a crypto exchange. Oops, that was brave as well.
Or that one that installed a paid vpn service during an update, without user consent.
You guessed it, brave that as well.
They stole money by adding donation links to content creators pages, then didn’t give the donated money to the creators.
This has nothing to do with browser.
This is an android thing.
Brand new account, with no other post or comment.
Nice ad account you got there.
I’m personally looking at setting up whisper or whisperx with bazarr, to get subtitles for movies and series that I can’t find any to download.