I found that really informal comments cut less deep 'hey man this needs double checking, read up on $x and then reconsider this block' (gender aside) is far better received than 'This is missing fundamental concepts around $x read up on them then rewrite this block'
I still don't understand why services don't attempt to bundle more. All my media is pirated, which conveniently ends up in a single app.
I'd probably consider a $10-15/AUD streaming service if it included all the music, movies and party-music-video playlists I need /in one app/. It'd be a pretty tactical move to bundle that all into a decent internet plan, too.
But judging by the TV shows my sickchill server and automatically nabs and pushes to my plex server my tastes would require 4-5 separate services and be in the range of $40-60/month, so I guess I'll keep doing what I currently do.
I'll also point out that defending against buffer overflows which are considered vulnerabilities is a far saner boundary than a blacklist of files which grows infinitely.
Or we could, you know, just stop using Microsoft Office and Adobe products which are a huge, if not the biggest culprit of that kind of crazy behaviour.
There's lots of 'Do we need Kaspersky' type questions in here already. The more pertinent question is whether AV is actually effective, or if stronger countermeasures like application whitelisting are needed?
However, I really dislike how if I click what is traditionally the maximize button, it doesn't maximize both horizontally and vertically. I also really dislike how if I use the fullscreen mode and then use alt tab to switch windows it takes like 400ms to transition with some animation, and I can't disable it. I also really dislike how alt tab behaves, I want it to switch all windows not window classes. I also really dislike that I can't alt-click+drag to resize or move windows like I can in linux.
But most of all, I really dislike that there's no easy way to modify these behaviors without installing third party applications which at best can be described as dirty hacks.
They're the major reasons I use GNU/Linux over MacOS. Or would choose Windows over MacOS if Linux wasn't available.
And if you do manage, it's granting the ability to intercept/modify traffic, right?
If so, this won't lead to RCE on a host mobile unless other exploits are used. There's probably some interesting stuff that can be done against shitty IOT-type devices, but they should be assumed vulnerable anyway...
That's for unencrypted credentials captured going across the wire by the ops team. That's to highlight insecure comms not hack people.
There was an instance where someone used a wifi pineapple 0day to brick pineapples, which are considered script kiddie tools in many circles.
Generally nobody will waste a valuable 0day at defcon to attack a personal device. If you get popped it's probably because you're running known vulnerable software.
This isn't even a service request, it's a bug report.
Are you able to name a reputable email provider which isn't >$60/year or self-managed? My 65 year old mother probably wouldn't be interested in either of those two, but would be willing to pay for per-use support lines for the one time in 13 years which rendered her account inaccessible.
And lets not forget my father, who couldn't access his _paid_ Telstra/O365 standard-user work email. When I called the Telstra support line they gave me administrative access to the entire instance, no proof of ID necessary (I literally said I'm not associated with the company and calling on behalf of my father).
To be honest, I'm not sure which is worse now that I think about it.
> I wouldn't expect any free service that involves a paid employee from any service I don't pay for (with money, not privacy).
I expected at least one response suggesting this. I, and many others would consider email access my absolute most critical asset, it's also extremely difficult to switch providers. It's not like your real estate goes 'nope sorry you can't prove yourself, we can't replace your lost keys without validation, sorry, go buy new stuff and live somewhere else' - I imagine that would be illegal in many countries even if the place was rent free.
I understand that Google support, if it existed, would be inundated with bad tickets. However, I don't imagine having a skeleton set of support staff and a support workflow that requires users to climb mountains to communicate with a human would really impact on googles bottom line. It would have stopped me venting in various places about the issue, and might end up losing potential sales when I/others push our employers to use $not_google because their support sucks.
- Unit/Integration test X11 tools inside docker Xephyr sessions during CI
- Transplant magnet links from ThePirateBay into a bittorrent client
- Type stuff into virtual machines rather than install guest
additions
- Import data into remote desktop sessions for otherwise internet-isolated+Copypaste disabled remote hosts, complete with integrity checking powershell scripts which were also imported into the environment that were used to self-integrity check prior to integrity checking other files.
The use of xdotool is probably an antipattern in a perfect world, but that doesn't mean that it's not damn handy from time to time.