These are spanning from the earliest adopters, up until August of last year. Plenty of idiots using a cruise control system and trusting their lives to beta software. Not the same as the current FSD software.
Your own car insurance isn’t based on your driving skill when you had your learners permit. When Tesla takes on the liability and insurance for CyberCab, you’ll know it’s much safer than human drivers.
Tubi has a few gems: Sarah & Duck, Mofy, and Hooray for Huckle. These can be downloaded for offline use (ad-free) using the command line software called yt-dlp. This software has the ability to load your cookies from your web browser, so it may work for some login sites, for example if you just pay for one month.
I do have a dual Ethernet computer running ProxMox. But if I’m setting it up between the ONT and router, I may as well go all in setting it up as a soft router. Then it would be my firewall, DNS, and DHCP server, and I don’t need to worry about the router.
On the other hand, Gowdiak has not provided the technical details of his findings to Microsoft. The researcher is displeased with the way the tech giant handled his previous PlayReady vulnerability report, saying that his work was mostly ignored.
Gowdiak claims Microsoft has now requested additional information on the findings, informing him that the research may be eligible for a bug bounty reward, but the researcher says at this point he is only willing to share the information with the vendor through a commercial agreement.
Good to know. Your seed box isn’t shared with others at the same IP? I wonder if newer “anonymous” BitTorrent protocols allow bouncing IPs or something.
It’s a good idea, and easy enough to do. I can’t confirm anything going on in the router without hacking it myself. But even if that fixes the problem temporarily, it wouldn’t patch any vulnerabilities in the router so it could be a short term fix.
Looks like a bit of a learning curve. Depending on where it sits in the network topology I may or may not be able to see the traffic? For instance if the router is compromised, running arbitrary code like a proxy server, it may be completely isolated from my LAN, right?
I have 4 IoT appliances, and 3 cameras. None of them have really high WiFi traffic. I’m looking into what kind of logging I can get from the router, as I’m primarily concerned with internet traffic rather than LAN traffic. I have two Linux servers that are always on, so it could be software running on one of those too. Also it seems the router itself isn’t the most secure device so I have to check that somehow too.
The DHT is what the torrent client uses to connect to peers. Any invalid IP entry should make that peer unreachable. But maybe some clients have a way to start a download connection, while providing a false IP for the upload connection. I’m not sure how it works exactly.
I know what my public IP is, and it's static, and listed correctly on IKWYD. The premise of the site is that torrent magnet links use distributed hash tables (DHT), which gives a public list of IP addresses who have participated in a particular torrent. Given that I have a static IP address, I'm not sure how it would be possible for my IP to show up, unless somebody is using my router as a proxy.
There's some workarounds but they aren't trivial. Basically I have to find a way to extract the certificate from the router, or set up a certificate pass-through with another router. If I switch ISPs, I could bring my own device.
Yes I can. AT&T has remote access to their routers, and they apply firmware updates automatically. That by itself is a security risk. I do have the default password which is printed on the side, so I will change it to see if that fixes anything. I’m hesitant to do a factory reset because of some static IP and port forwarding I use. Of course the port forwarding could be a vulnerability passed on to one of my network machines, so I will try that if the password change doesn’t work.
That’s like seatbelts, a condition for a privilege. We also condition that drivers have good enough vision, but that doesn’t violate any rights. I was thinking of drug tests for employment.
Agreed. I was thinking about prescriptions, not illegal drugs. But it’s clear with fentanyl and other prescription drugs that even that is not working. I think the government should be focused on purity, safety, and non-religious rehab. I don’t think the education part is really helping, except for websites like erowid.
But bodily autonomy only really covers ingesting. Perhaps that could make drug tests unconstitutional.
Drugs can be regulated by availability, not by illegality of ingestion. It can be illegal to sell.
If circumcision is legal, gender reassignment should be as well. Both are voluntary genital surgeries that are medically unnecessary. I don’t agree with it, but it’s none of my business. That’s a decision for kids and their parents and doctors to make.
Seatbelts can be a condition of using public roads, same as the minimum drinking age of 21 is actually a condition for federal highway funding. Same for vaccines, you don’t have to but you can’t go to public school, get into stadiums, or fly in airplanes. And they should expect quarantine procedures in hospitals and higher health insurance, Do I think people should be vaccinated, absolutely, but if they don’t want to they should just face whatever repercussions are reasonable - but it doesn’t need to be illegal to be unvaccinated.
Like I said, you can make it more complicated, but I don’t think it is. Just because it’s legal, doesn’t mean it’s unregulated. The government can impose regs to make us safer and slow us down from trying to hurt ourselves, but they have no business imposing laws that limit a basic and fundamental human right, to decide what to do to their own body.
For suicide I would imagine a compassionate therapy rehab-like system. You get checked in and go through a few weeks, they try psychedelics or whatever might help you, and if you still want to when it’s through you get a permit and a lethal injection. Better than having people leap off bridges because they’re out of options. Or overdose on painkillers and burden the healthcare system. Or traumatize their family. By the way the government spends a lot of money on suicide barrier rails on bridges that could be better spent on treatment facilities like the one I’m describing.
We need a federal constitutional amendment of bodily autonomy. Abortions, tattoos, personal drug use, gender reassignment, plastic surgery, suicide, neuralink, etc. All the same issue: My body, fuck off. You can make it more complicated than that but it’s not.
It doesn’t matter whether you agree with face tattoos or not. Nobody is making you get one. It’s not your concern. An artist can choose not to give face tattoos, as a doctor can choose whether they want to give a vasectomy to a young child-free man. But the government should have no say about what a person is allowed to do or have done to their own body. The government can regulate to make it safer, but not disallow.
These are spanning from the earliest adopters, up until August of last year. Plenty of idiots using a cruise control system and trusting their lives to beta software. Not the same as the current FSD software.
Your own car insurance isn’t based on your driving skill when you had your learners permit. When Tesla takes on the liability and insurance for CyberCab, you’ll know it’s much safer than human drivers.