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157
Joined
10 mo. ago

  • If you are on Firefox:

    1. Click on 三 at the top right corner
    2. Select "Passwords"
    3. Search for your password entry in the top left search box
    4. If Lemmy entry is there, click on it
    5. Click on the eye logo next to the "Password" field to reveal your password
  • The site admins probably know your email, but they definitely doesn't know what your password is. They store the password in a way that it cannot be recovered.

  • Funny seeing NixOS being touted as an efficient OS when it's the ultimate coomfiger's OS

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  • No not yet... What I'm doing is closer to academia rather than practical, but I do want to do practical. I'm thinking of going for Android system security, and I feel that I need to find what I will specialise in first.

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  • Live off of finding CVEs. I'm currently messing with Android's TEE, hoping that hasn't been picked clean.

  • No, not a mix of both. Either exclusively wins only, or losses only. Only way to tell these two apart is to see if this information is being celebrated or not...

  • Do you have Bluehost web hosting plan? In that case, Bluehost would do the most heavy lifting regarding the derliverability. Email deliverability with big hosts like that shouldn't be a problem.

  • Owning a domain for yourself and having a provider send/receive email on your behalf is a common choice, and it has its own benefits such as being able to migrate to other providers easily. As long as you renew your domain properly, it should be fine. Though do note that only you would use that domain, so anyone would know it was you who sent that email.

    Owning a domain for yourself AND handling email sending/receiving can be challenging because there's a chance your email gets filtered as spam, and the receiver doesn't get what you sent. It's also possible that your server goes down, and the email sent to you doesn't arrive properly, though the email server usually try to send again a number of times before giving up.

    If you are confident about setting a server, I can personally recommend Mailcow. As long as you set up SPF, DKIM, DMARC, it should pass most spam filter including Gmail. If you don't want to deal with the potential headache, getting a provider to send/receive emails for you is a good choice too.

  • 연패

    Can mean "to lose multiple times in a row" (連敗) or "to win multiple times in a row" (連霸).

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  • The users and mods would decide that. Sure, mods can abuse it, but they already have the means to censor someone (ban users, tag their post as NSFW, delete their posts). I don't expect it to be perfect, but it still would be an improvement, especially in communities that you would usually expect to be light-hearted, such as showerthoughts or mildlyinfuriating.

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  • I don't see how it can be abused in a way it harms users though. Overusing it just means their post won't be visible to many people, so abusing it just harms themselves. It would be abuse it they didn't tag it, but that still would be an improvement compared to the current situation, and we could enforce a rule to ensure things that are political without a doubt gets tagged. (Eg: Mentioning politicians, ideas, etc)

  • I dump my encrypted data to someone who probably practices 3-2-1 rule (which is Backblaze for me). I mean, these guys back up data for a living.

  • Grub entry missing and Nvidia driver installation not going smoothly did happen to me, though the former is somewhat independent of the distro.

  • Not even close. Too many things to learn, too many things you can get good at, not enough time to do them all.

  • Worse: Debugging regex that needs to be passed as a string.

  •  
        
    show me the money
    black sheep wall
    power overwhelming
    operation cwal
    food for thought
    
    
      

    How I played Starcraft as a child

  • .ch

    • Renewal is cheap, even if the domain is short
    • No particular requirements for registering
    • Automatic WHOIS lookup is disabled
    • Easy domain hacks
    • Decent reputation, ranks low in mail spam rate
  • Same here. I spent last month transitioning all my servers to NixOS and it feels so comfy! I do a small test on my desktop when I do something that might break stuff first, and then add it to server's config later.

    --target-host and --use-remote-sudo makes it even better too.

  • If you're considering (something) + Syncthing, try Orgmode. It looks like Markdown but has a lot of features for note management and navigation.