archive.is
, archive.ph
, archive.md
and archive.today
are Russian assets.
I agree.
I guess most of these people don’t understand the difference between the protocol/server and the client software, and most of those use the web ui anyhow.
It’s called the Googleverse.
Many people don’t know the difference between the Google search bar and the URL bar anymore.
spend the next months transferring all relevant emails.
Why don’t you just keep them on your machine? No need to clutter online storage with old mails.
Oh wait, you probably don’t use email client software.
This is actually good to know. OTOH, aren’t all messages transfered using encryption with most email providers/clients anyhow (TLS/SSL)? This is mostly about making sure your data on the servers stays safe even if someone gains access, right?
encrypts your emails automatically (outgoing)
How does that work for recipients I haven’t shared secrets with?
BTW any decent email client has an option or plugin to do that.
What issue?
I didn’t mean to say that my eternal email has anything to do with Proton.
Because Opt-in is their kryptonite. They know very well that 99% of their users never change the default settings. They will fight tooth and nail against privacy by default because it’s against their business model.
I never quite understand why people use Proton. It just automates the exchange of PGP/GPG keys, but only if the other person also uses Proton, right?
Anyhow, +1 to paying a small amount of money for email. I was with posteo.de myself for many years. I heard mailbox.org is even better/safer and has slightly more features. Both start at 1€/month.
BTW, I set up an eternal redirect email address a long time ago, so I can change the actual provider without having to tell all my contacts.
Trump and his Republican stooges in Congress apparently anticipated this. Hidden inside their Big Ugly Bill is a provision intended to block the courts from using contempt to enforce its orders. It reads:
“No court of the United States may use appropriated funds to enforce a contempt citation for failure to comply with an injunction or temporary restraining order if no security was given when the injunction or order was issued …”
Translated: no federal court may enforce a contempt citation.
The measure would make most existing injunctions – in antitrust cases, police reform cases, school desegregation cases and others – unenforceable.
“This would be a stunning restriction on the power of the federal courts. The Supreme Court has long recognized that the contempt power is integral to the authority of the federal courts. Without the ability to enforce judicial orders, they are rendered mere advisory opinions which parties are free to disregard.”
In other words, with this single measure, Trump will have crowned himself king.
Here’s the original, with the creator’s answers.
I’m not sure why OP reposted. It’s not such an amazing project.
Reminds me of Sherlock Holmes’ treatise on typewriters
You just need to read more of the blog, I’m sure they went in-depth at some point.
Good old Kuketz-Blog, now also in English.
Usually solid advice, you can take everything they write without a pinch of salt.
When writing shell scripts that run in a loop I always look for files in /sys or /proc before using standard utilities. There’s a lot
Someone should make a comprehensive list I guess.
The most secure Bitcoin endpoint yet!
lol.
Okay, let’s be honest, it’s basically a crappy Pentium 4 box with Debian and nginx installed.
dd if=/proc/sys/kernel/random/uuid of=/dev/sda1
Peanuts. Real men do dd if=/proc/sys/kernel/random/uuid of=/dev/sda
while :; do cat /proc/sys/kernel/random/uuid > /dev/null; done
edit: on all cores for maximum “efficiency”
That’s what I mean. No more searching for ways to create shell-friendly randomness ($RANDOM does not always cut it).
You must have a lot of email accounts.