IPv6 usually have unique IP addresses (non-local) for every device in the network. does that mean it will malicious actors can target a device specifically inside a network?
Elizabeth Warren sends terse letter
"We're getting a bad reputation for facilitating the war against civilians, time for some positive PR. someone pass this on to the guardian"
Thanks a lot for the thorough explanation. This is going to be real handy for users on Windows Home. I'm guessing once the server is installed, one can connect to it from any RDP client, without needing the wfreerdp client, right?
I use Remmina on my Linux Mint setup.
are there any other instances using AT protocol?
it's unlikely they are going to be able to bruteforce your 2FA codes in the duration of the class, so just change them back once you're done with the class?
or record the video showing the whole process. change the code, show the video you recorded before the change
did you try it?
It's not that deep.
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Kid wants a video game thats paid
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Kid searches the game piracy website and finds it.
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Kid downloads and plays the pirated game
Every kid does this and you know it. People don't consider downloading things off of internet as some sort of a moral test or a criminal action. And software piracy is just in paper in some countries.
Kodi on my Android TV box, I couldn't use extensions on stremio for some reason (or I didn't try hard enough). It's still there and when I try to find a stream for any movie, it just returns blank.
people who hate firefox are eating it up. it's so stupid
he's not getting anything done without stackoverflow, so might as well download it all.
https://archive.org/details/stackexchange