cryptofistMonk
No user record in our sample, but cryptofistMonk has activity below (stories or comments). Likely we have partial data — the full bulk-load will fill profiles in.
No user record in our sample, but cryptofistMonk has activity below (stories or comments). Likely we have partial data — the full bulk-load will fill profiles in.
Ah I found this https://ctrl-c.us/posts/test-goarch I guess it's qemu-user-binfmt registering the alternate bin formats to automatically run under QEMU, that's pretty neat
Wait is go test automatically running it under QEMU or what's going on here?
Hah, got it in 4 even though my first guess started with 'a' because I didn't know this was binary search yet
"They’d switch to a 4096 bit RSA key, but not only was I no longer able to mint my own API tokens, the legitimate ones I’d initially generated still worked." I wonder how the old JWTs signed with the 512-bit key still…
This is not really that worrying IMO - we already have weaponized toxins, viruses, and enough explosives to blow up the entire planet. So what if an AI can come up with something a little bit worse? It isn't the…
> sounds like you're in a place where an EV doesn't make sense. They don't make sense for everybody, but that doesn't mean they aren't fine for the majority of people who drive. So don't buy an EV Sounds great, the…
Damn, unfortunate that you will revoke all these certificates if there is truly no security risk. This is likely going to break a lot of our users, or require manual intervention within the next 42 hours.
Seems like a very simple email filter would do the job, for internal emails at least
Very often unpaid
Presumably order numbers are easily guessable, so the md5 really offers no protection at all in this case and is no better than just using the order number
You don't even need to store multiple hashes, just check both versions of the submitted password against the one stored hash
Not necessarily, it could simply be checking both versions of the password against the hash
It really depends how you define automating. I tend to think of writing higher level languages and even libraries and functions as automating the repetitive low-level parts of programming
Forests are basically carbon neutral once they're mature, peat bogs would probably be much more effective as carbon is continually sequestered underwater.
This article just showed me an ad with my exact last name embroidered on a t-shirt... Bit ironic
Top 10% in the world is not very high... Top 0.01% is still only top 100 in a city of a million, seems a bit more aspirational
Exactly the point - when apps charge too much, people will complain and alternatives will arise. From your second source: > "Dozens of locally owned services are proving there's a better alternative"
And they will become irrelevant if there are no good restaurants on their platform
Delivery is expensive and network effects are valuable. Price-fixing is already illegal
The restriction may have made sense during a pandemic, but long term this really seems like something for markets, rather than governments, to solve
> Often trade deals do include agreements about subsidies. Yes but it's complicated when you're dealing with China where the govt is heavily involved in many "private" cos
Yeah that's something I definitely need to do... Most people really can't afford it though
If you even have a main doctor (many Canadians can't find one) sure - then you wait 6 months to see the specialist who may/may not know what to do. My wife was recently in a car accident and waited 3 months to see a…
Right. Other governments are always going to subsidize though (unless you work that into the trade deals I suppose). Obviously any barriers to the success of US fabs should be removed, but it's not clear if there's a…
> The reason these items are not produced at home is because of government policies. Which policies? I believe you, genuinely curious