And so long as people use that logic, we'll never live in that society.
A "petty battle against CloudFlare DNS users"? No. They require a standardized DNS extension in order for their services to operate properly, and CloudFlare is waging a petty battle against the standard.
It doesn't even matter whether the copyright owner likes it or knows about it or not. Selling a used book is legal.
Meanwhile, all the copies of those same books which were purchased by libraries are now sitting on library shelves, unable to be loaned out. The copyright holders have already gotten paid.
That's pretty clearly exactly what they're arguing.
Yeah... that's very rare.
They are open ports which are accessible to the Internet at large. Or at least, any site you go to. If you don't like that there are various means to close off those ports to your browsers (Windows firewall, network…
How is it not? Uniqueness would cease to matter between different tenants. They're unique by virtue of using a different database.
IMO this is a symptom of a larger problem with the entire web 'ecosystem' (HTML, CSS, JS primarily). It all tries (or tried, anyway) to be simple and easy and forgiving - which means that simple things are easy, and…
You can always take a multi-tenant system and convert it into a single-tenant system a lot more easily. First and foremost, you can simply run the full multi-tenant system with only a single tenant, which if nothing…
Open ports which are accessible to the Internet at large are not "machine internals". If you do not want someone to access your systems, then you should configure your systems to not allow that access.
> Port scanning is definitely not something I would expect when browsing the web (And based on the amount of upvotes on the last thread, not something most of HN would expect) Then you're a fool, frankly. Plenty of…
> This makes sense as the programs being scanned for are all Windows remote access tools. Wait. VNC is a Windows remote access tool? LOL.
You're assuming that the 'bad guys' pay attention and look closely enough to even see that this detection exists and figure out how to bypass it.
Knowledgeable developers are part of every language's ecosystem.
In Soviet Russia, your cell provider sells this data. Wait, no, that's America. I was thinking of America.
I believe most if not all states seal juvenile records by default. If so, then a court would have to unseal it. As an example, in Texas, juvenile records are automatically sealed in most cases, and can basically only be…
> I did have an arrest warrant out for me and I turned myself in Sounds like you technically were arrested. > aren't allowed to use ... sealed court records against you That's... basically what sealed means. >…
The fragment is, at the very least, exposed to JavaScript. It's also has several problems which are explicitly called out (for the query string) in your own link: Shoulder surfing, cache, history
Except we don't need to "solve the problem of high taxes on small business". We need to solve the problem of low taxes on big business.
"91 profitable Fortune 500 companies paid $0 in taxes in 2018 under Trump's tax law" https://finance.yahoo.com/news/trump-tax-law-fortune-500-com... "The 379 profitable members of the Fortune 500 paid an effective…
No, really? I would've never guessed.
Honestly, this misses the worst part of the ISO layout. PUT MY \| BACK WHERE IT BELONGS!
I honestly prefer just using right alt as a AltGr. Even have a custom Windows layout to re-create (parts of) the "US International (with dead keys)" layout from Linux/X/GNOME/wherever it comes from. Instead of having to…
> some kind of „International English“ ISO layout with a tall return key and a short left shift key Those exist here in the US too. They're just a lot less common. I've had the misfortune of having one, in the past.…
And so long as people use that logic, we'll never live in that society.
A "petty battle against CloudFlare DNS users"? No. They require a standardized DNS extension in order for their services to operate properly, and CloudFlare is waging a petty battle against the standard.
It doesn't even matter whether the copyright owner likes it or knows about it or not. Selling a used book is legal.
Meanwhile, all the copies of those same books which were purchased by libraries are now sitting on library shelves, unable to be loaned out. The copyright holders have already gotten paid.
That's pretty clearly exactly what they're arguing.
Yeah... that's very rare.
They are open ports which are accessible to the Internet at large. Or at least, any site you go to. If you don't like that there are various means to close off those ports to your browsers (Windows firewall, network…
How is it not? Uniqueness would cease to matter between different tenants. They're unique by virtue of using a different database.
IMO this is a symptom of a larger problem with the entire web 'ecosystem' (HTML, CSS, JS primarily). It all tries (or tried, anyway) to be simple and easy and forgiving - which means that simple things are easy, and…
You can always take a multi-tenant system and convert it into a single-tenant system a lot more easily. First and foremost, you can simply run the full multi-tenant system with only a single tenant, which if nothing…
Open ports which are accessible to the Internet at large are not "machine internals". If you do not want someone to access your systems, then you should configure your systems to not allow that access.
> Port scanning is definitely not something I would expect when browsing the web (And based on the amount of upvotes on the last thread, not something most of HN would expect) Then you're a fool, frankly. Plenty of…
> This makes sense as the programs being scanned for are all Windows remote access tools. Wait. VNC is a Windows remote access tool? LOL.
You're assuming that the 'bad guys' pay attention and look closely enough to even see that this detection exists and figure out how to bypass it.
Knowledgeable developers are part of every language's ecosystem.
In Soviet Russia, your cell provider sells this data. Wait, no, that's America. I was thinking of America.
I believe most if not all states seal juvenile records by default. If so, then a court would have to unseal it. As an example, in Texas, juvenile records are automatically sealed in most cases, and can basically only be…
> I did have an arrest warrant out for me and I turned myself in Sounds like you technically were arrested. > aren't allowed to use ... sealed court records against you That's... basically what sealed means. >…
The fragment is, at the very least, exposed to JavaScript. It's also has several problems which are explicitly called out (for the query string) in your own link: Shoulder surfing, cache, history
Except we don't need to "solve the problem of high taxes on small business". We need to solve the problem of low taxes on big business.
"91 profitable Fortune 500 companies paid $0 in taxes in 2018 under Trump's tax law" https://finance.yahoo.com/news/trump-tax-law-fortune-500-com... "The 379 profitable members of the Fortune 500 paid an effective…
No, really? I would've never guessed.
Honestly, this misses the worst part of the ISO layout. PUT MY \| BACK WHERE IT BELONGS!
I honestly prefer just using right alt as a AltGr. Even have a custom Windows layout to re-create (parts of) the "US International (with dead keys)" layout from Linux/X/GNOME/wherever it comes from. Instead of having to…
> some kind of „International English“ ISO layout with a tall return key and a short left shift key Those exist here in the US too. They're just a lot less common. I've had the misfortune of having one, in the past.…