Using the tangent line at that point. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elliptic_curve_point_multiplic...
I feel like that would be a financially detrimental move in the case of the US.
Yes, this is made possible by WiFi probe requests, which broadcast your MAC address and previously associated access points.
> I'm skeptical that cloud flare can somehow be roped into 'corporate censorship' -- they IMHO clearly were not founded or intended to enable some sort of nefarious intent. Quite the opposite in fact. The fact that…
Thank you. That is a good first step to tackling this problem.
Linux Mint doesn't seem to prioritize security in general. No TLS for ISOs, no easily spottable signatures for ISOs, marking security updates untrusted by default...
Yes, it's almost too convenient. Lazy me is still slightly miffed that auto nginx is not fully supported, however.
Apple has the encryption keys for data stored on iCloud servers. The FBI wants a backdoor into the phone itself.
Using the tangent line at that point. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elliptic_curve_point_multiplic...
I feel like that would be a financially detrimental move in the case of the US.
Yes, this is made possible by WiFi probe requests, which broadcast your MAC address and previously associated access points.
> I'm skeptical that cloud flare can somehow be roped into 'corporate censorship' -- they IMHO clearly were not founded or intended to enable some sort of nefarious intent. Quite the opposite in fact. The fact that…
Thank you. That is a good first step to tackling this problem.
Linux Mint doesn't seem to prioritize security in general. No TLS for ISOs, no easily spottable signatures for ISOs, marking security updates untrusted by default...
Yes, it's almost too convenient. Lazy me is still slightly miffed that auto nginx is not fully supported, however.
Apple has the encryption keys for data stored on iCloud servers. The FBI wants a backdoor into the phone itself.