I've been running a relay from home for years. I think I'll have a shot at this. I'm not sure we want Russians on tor right now though.
pHr34kY
ISPs often have SMTP relay servers. If you hook into that, your mail gets instant street cred.
Where I'm from, "dragged" means to be removed against your will.
You know, like "the pitcher got dragged after the first inning".
Setting up fail2ban to block people trying to brute force the admin panel is a good start.
I've set mine up so that entering my PIN backwards will nuke it. At which point I can ask for my phone back.
Law enforcement have tools to bypass lockscreens and access the data on the device. They use backdoors and exploits, so older phones are more vulnerable. Most exploits only work if the phone has been unlocked at some point since it was booted.
This is why law enforcement keep them powered-on, and in a faraday cage. They are in a state with a better chance of unlock, but have no signal so nobody can remotely find/lock/wipe it.
18 hours by default.
You mean "Microsoft Terminal Services Client"?
I was tempted by Arc. Intel drivers always "just worked", but they are just slow. Arc didn't address the problem like I'd hoped, and AMD really got their shit together in the last 5 years or so.
That's hilarious. I haven't been able to enable IPv6 since the August update. The machine just spins to 100% CPU across every core like a forkbomb.
It pissed me off because my home network is built IPv6-first.
If my work pushes 24H2 I'll just have to disable both :/
Linux is great when you have the opportunity to choose the right hardware upfront.
There's a few things that are outright neglected.