Sounds like a "Yes". Thanks for the reply, dahdum.
Mr Stamos is unhappy with Russia, mentioned repeatedly. Their "activity" needs to be "dealt with". AIPAC, "America's Pro-Israel Lobby", isn't worth a mention. Israel apparently does nothing that needs to be dealt with.…
Quite right. In fact, those statisticians in the posted article are surely mistaken. We know that using tricks to hide things is sound science. http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2009/11/the-cr...…
One not on the list is Template::Toolkit. Perhaps it's considered too old-school. TT is stable, available virtually everywhere and (like perl itself) is well documented and works without fuss.
> assumptions about who is responsible for data security. The chief assumption appears to be "anyone but the browser vendors". Let us consult the article: BeEF This, to me, was the most impactful demo Quite the…
> Your browser then sends Referer: ... While I don't doubt dataskydd's good intentions, their advice about referrers is a sign that we live in Clown World. Yes, your browser's tendency to provide a referrer might well…
Yet they have numerous defenders on this site, all the more peculiar considering those companies' collusion to avoid paying market rates to developers. The preference to be a sharecropper on their plantations is…
Try https://wiby.me/
> To me it felt rogue since it had been generated without me knowing nor expecting it That's understandable. Fastmail do the same, i.e. acquiring certs for their customers' domains without asking or informing, with a…
"your data belongs to you" Not the SSL certificate for your domain, which Fastmail will acquire with or without your prior knowledge or consent, and to which you have no access or control.…
> brilliant, ethical, and pragmatic In case it's news to others, as it was to me, Fastmail routinely acquires SSL certificates for its customers' domains without their knowledge or consent.…
Sounds like a "Yes". Thanks for the reply, dahdum.
Mr Stamos is unhappy with Russia, mentioned repeatedly. Their "activity" needs to be "dealt with". AIPAC, "America's Pro-Israel Lobby", isn't worth a mention. Israel apparently does nothing that needs to be dealt with.…
Quite right. In fact, those statisticians in the posted article are surely mistaken. We know that using tricks to hide things is sound science. http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2009/11/the-cr...…
One not on the list is Template::Toolkit. Perhaps it's considered too old-school. TT is stable, available virtually everywhere and (like perl itself) is well documented and works without fuss.
> assumptions about who is responsible for data security. The chief assumption appears to be "anyone but the browser vendors". Let us consult the article: BeEF This, to me, was the most impactful demo Quite the…
> Your browser then sends Referer: ... While I don't doubt dataskydd's good intentions, their advice about referrers is a sign that we live in Clown World. Yes, your browser's tendency to provide a referrer might well…
Yet they have numerous defenders on this site, all the more peculiar considering those companies' collusion to avoid paying market rates to developers. The preference to be a sharecropper on their plantations is…
Try https://wiby.me/
> To me it felt rogue since it had been generated without me knowing nor expecting it That's understandable. Fastmail do the same, i.e. acquiring certs for their customers' domains without asking or informing, with a…
"your data belongs to you" Not the SSL certificate for your domain, which Fastmail will acquire with or without your prior knowledge or consent, and to which you have no access or control.…
> brilliant, ethical, and pragmatic In case it's news to others, as it was to me, Fastmail routinely acquires SSL certificates for its customers' domains without their knowledge or consent.…