If you have a service that shares information between people all over the world, a few big companies and one government is for most cases an improvement over all the involved ISPs and all of their respective governments.
If the malicious-npm-package-of-the-week is reading arbitrary files on your workstation, isn't it usually able to run git clone/push/whatever with your current credentials anyway?
But then why change the renewal process for the people who were already fingerprinted for the original visa?
I often use vim despite knowing only a few basic commands because I'm already running various commands on the remote machine in the terminal and don't want the context switch. And because connection / file path…
This idea of everyone producing absurd amounts of git objects is less fantastic now [1]. We're still far from these numbers, but an order of magnitude less far than last year [2]. Also an interesting bit of history…
And the U in GNU, while we're at it.
And most of them are pretending to be Chrome. If Google had a good case against someone reusing their user agent, maybe they would already have sued? Or maybe not. Got some random bot from my server logs. Yeah, it's…
> scrapers can ingest them and say "nope we won't scrape there again in the future" Do all the AI scrapers actually do that?
> Hey I wonder if there is some situation where negative SEO would be a good tactic. Generally though I think if you wanted something to stay hidden it just shouldn’t be on a public web server. At least once upon a time…
> search still can't a.) rank the alert bot that is just spamming the alerts channel as "not relevant" I find "Exclude automations" toggle to be good enough. But we might have very different workspaces, as I usually…
But it's not about that. I don't like this decision either, but the other side of the trade-off is not just about some abstract concepts or implementation, it's about complexity of the model you need to keep in your…
Most people writing any language without a linter are holding it wrong. When a linter warns me about such an expression, it usually means that even if it doesn't blow up, it increases the cognitive load for anyone…
Interestingly, I think this is one of the cases where both the "For context…" comment and yours add important context for the parent comment that some readers may be not familiar with. Although that second one serves…
> Legal size folders exist and are widely used by people who use ... legal size paper. Sure. But I didn't know I use legal size paper or even what it is before I asked the apartment complex to print the lease agreement,…
> legal (letter but longer) This one surprised me quite a bit. I think most people have A4/letter-sized folders. Why does anyone think that papers slightly longer than those folders are a good idea?
Was it like a temporary assignment to another team? Did the manager at least know what team that was? Or have any idea when the employee is going to return full-time to the tasks of their primary team?
By the way, that's a regionally cool name. I read it at first as "shemesh", that means "Sun" in Hebrew.
Note this part: > That said, background processes invoked from Eshell can be controlled the same way as any other background process in Emacs I haven't used Eshell much, but this makes a simple "command &" arguably much…
That's definitely a factor at least some people consider when choosing their job. > Pretty much everyone in tech is responsible for great harm by this logic. We're also responsible for great good. The question which is…
Loops nested deep enough that you need an ultrawide to avoid truncated lines!?
I believe that if most foo's users should just call it with [], the Pythonic way is to make the argument optional.
All the numbers in that array are different.
IIRC Anton Nosik, a pioneer of Russian web, explicitly said that he chose Livejournal user name "dolboeb" (~"dumbfuck") because he didn't want traditional media to cite him.
Is it likely that these particular private keys were wiped ~immediately after creation?
Did you notice that the piece of software in question was apparently installed mostly in companies where regulations and inspections already override sysadmins' common sense? Are you sure the answer is simply more of…
If you have a service that shares information between people all over the world, a few big companies and one government is for most cases an improvement over all the involved ISPs and all of their respective governments.
If the malicious-npm-package-of-the-week is reading arbitrary files on your workstation, isn't it usually able to run git clone/push/whatever with your current credentials anyway?
But then why change the renewal process for the people who were already fingerprinted for the original visa?
I often use vim despite knowing only a few basic commands because I'm already running various commands on the remote machine in the terminal and don't want the context switch. And because connection / file path…
This idea of everyone producing absurd amounts of git objects is less fantastic now [1]. We're still far from these numbers, but an order of magnitude less far than last year [2]. Also an interesting bit of history…
And the U in GNU, while we're at it.
And most of them are pretending to be Chrome. If Google had a good case against someone reusing their user agent, maybe they would already have sued? Or maybe not. Got some random bot from my server logs. Yeah, it's…
> scrapers can ingest them and say "nope we won't scrape there again in the future" Do all the AI scrapers actually do that?
> Hey I wonder if there is some situation where negative SEO would be a good tactic. Generally though I think if you wanted something to stay hidden it just shouldn’t be on a public web server. At least once upon a time…
> search still can't a.) rank the alert bot that is just spamming the alerts channel as "not relevant" I find "Exclude automations" toggle to be good enough. But we might have very different workspaces, as I usually…
But it's not about that. I don't like this decision either, but the other side of the trade-off is not just about some abstract concepts or implementation, it's about complexity of the model you need to keep in your…
Most people writing any language without a linter are holding it wrong. When a linter warns me about such an expression, it usually means that even if it doesn't blow up, it increases the cognitive load for anyone…
Interestingly, I think this is one of the cases where both the "For context…" comment and yours add important context for the parent comment that some readers may be not familiar with. Although that second one serves…
> Legal size folders exist and are widely used by people who use ... legal size paper. Sure. But I didn't know I use legal size paper or even what it is before I asked the apartment complex to print the lease agreement,…
> legal (letter but longer) This one surprised me quite a bit. I think most people have A4/letter-sized folders. Why does anyone think that papers slightly longer than those folders are a good idea?
Was it like a temporary assignment to another team? Did the manager at least know what team that was? Or have any idea when the employee is going to return full-time to the tasks of their primary team?
By the way, that's a regionally cool name. I read it at first as "shemesh", that means "Sun" in Hebrew.
Note this part: > That said, background processes invoked from Eshell can be controlled the same way as any other background process in Emacs I haven't used Eshell much, but this makes a simple "command &" arguably much…
That's definitely a factor at least some people consider when choosing their job. > Pretty much everyone in tech is responsible for great harm by this logic. We're also responsible for great good. The question which is…
Loops nested deep enough that you need an ultrawide to avoid truncated lines!?
I believe that if most foo's users should just call it with [], the Pythonic way is to make the argument optional.
All the numbers in that array are different.
IIRC Anton Nosik, a pioneer of Russian web, explicitly said that he chose Livejournal user name "dolboeb" (~"dumbfuck") because he didn't want traditional media to cite him.
Is it likely that these particular private keys were wiped ~immediately after creation?
Did you notice that the piece of software in question was apparently installed mostly in companies where regulations and inspections already override sysadmins' common sense? Are you sure the answer is simply more of…