really helpful, thanks for sharing!
> In the UK, if they like you enough, they name a pub after you. No truer statement. Made me smile to read.
Bit of a nightmare at a group or org level, though.
Interestingly, making this change can trigger a CrowdStrike "privilege escalation" alert.
Their documentation is excellent too. Also worth mentioning the open-source derivative: https://github.com/juanfont/headscale
Is there? Could you give some examples of email providers that wouldn't comply with a legal request? Protonmail, from what I understand, does contest the requests it receives, but some they have to follow. My impression…
and financially scandalous
Mondo uses SendGrid. They have a subscription bar at the bottom of the homepage: mondoshop.com
Emojis in subject lines can sometimes cause issues with ticketing systems, so I can only imagine how ticketing systems will like emojis as domains.
How would you later remove the pin?
On the BambooHR issue, can you elaborate a bit more?
really helpful, thanks for sharing!
> In the UK, if they like you enough, they name a pub after you. No truer statement. Made me smile to read.
Bit of a nightmare at a group or org level, though.
Interestingly, making this change can trigger a CrowdStrike "privilege escalation" alert.
Their documentation is excellent too. Also worth mentioning the open-source derivative: https://github.com/juanfont/headscale
Is there? Could you give some examples of email providers that wouldn't comply with a legal request? Protonmail, from what I understand, does contest the requests it receives, but some they have to follow. My impression…
and financially scandalous
Mondo uses SendGrid. They have a subscription bar at the bottom of the homepage: mondoshop.com
Emojis in subject lines can sometimes cause issues with ticketing systems, so I can only imagine how ticketing systems will like emojis as domains.
How would you later remove the pin?
On the BambooHR issue, can you elaborate a bit more?