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2 yr. ago

  • You think an asus, linksys, netgear,etc doesnt handle ipv6???

  • Do you have an example? Because it works great on openwrt, dd-wrt, pfsense, opnsense, unifi, mikrotik....and then if you're using the isp equipment it works out of the box.

  • Honestly this isn't even true anymore. Most major ISPs have implemented dual stack now. The customer doesn't know or care because it's done at the CPE for them.

    I use a browser extension which tells me if the site I'm at is 6 or 4 or mixed. In 2024 most major sites support V6. A lot of this is due to CDN supporting it natively.

    The fact that GitHub doesn't is quickly becoming the exception.

  • Mans spends 10 episodes just raising his power level, 20 getting beat into a pulp, eats a senzu bean and then its like 5 episodes until the finale.

    The first time goku fell of snake way i knew we were in for some shit.

  • Any virtual graphics on any dock is going to suck for any OS.

    Agreed. Which is why I recommended a different dock.

    For the most they work fine for productivity applications and video - but even on windows you get frequent disconnects from the monitors.

    The external enclosure is unnecessary with modern laptops as they should support multiple display's over usb-c. So instead of using a dock with a virtual card you want a usb-c display capable laptop with a dock that is also capable.

  • Dragon Ball Z: "That's cute."

  • They can do it all they want but it won't work...

    If I "opt in" it falls back to non doh immediately because using doh on my network is not up to Chrome.

    use-application-dns.net + nxdomain for any known doh provider

    I don't use pihole but doh blocking works great on my network. It should work on a pihole tho it's pretty basic stuff.

    If you can't resolve the domain you can't validate the TLS certificate.

  • Love it when ppl add "simply" to things as though it just hand waves it into success

  • It's all dependent on what you're doing and how. Like if you use Facebook you're fingerprinted to the tits.

    The granularity depends on examples like that.

    But something a bit more benign and not as granular would be finger printing you based on the timezone your browser offers up. It's not as basic as like "-7 GMT" since the iso list can go down to the state and or country. So if in your OS you picked "America/Houston" a lot of browsers will pony that up without hesitation.

    How many more bits of data until you know what city I'm in, Street I'm on. Etc. And there's tons of ways to derive that data over time.

    https://browserleaks.com/ is an interesting example that can show all the bits of data your browser can give up.

    And of course you can lock lots down given the right tools.

  • Web Location tracking has not been fully based on IP registration data for quite some time.

  • Really wanted to read this but the writing is so obnoxious I'm half convinced it was written by AI. The picture that goes with it was. I got halfway though before closing it.

  • I was a kid when I was there and puked.

  • The irony isn't lost on me but the comments show it wasn't that simple. If it was they surely would have done it.

  • It doesn't really surprise me that a self hosted project cant afford to self host it's own self or be able to find a neutral hosting location.

  • I don't use linux on desktop anymore but that seems like a major step backwards from 10 years ago where your worst worry for running multiple DEs was the bloat from having to run GTK and QT in a mixed environment.