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5 mo. ago

  • Reminds me a bit of how it was in Germany at the beginning of the Iraq war (2). Plenty of Americans saying we should be bombed back to the stone age for not going to Iraq, while our soldiers were dying in Afghanistan. I remember in all the bulletin boards people would kind of cheer for American losses, hoping secretly or sometimes openly that Iraq would win, and the schoolyard bully would get another bloody nose.

    That's the moment large parts of my generation became anti-american.

  • Americans like to think of themselves as heroes, fighting for what's right, upholding the constitution etc. But if you look at history Americans again and again chose to simply do nothing. You reached late Roman decadence.

    Here a candidate voted with the far right and a week later, one million people were on the streets. Population adjusted that would be 5 million Americans. That was a small protest for us. And that's nothing compared to the French. I looked at the biggest American demonstrations and this one demo, a regular Sunday for us, would have been the third biggest in the US, population adjusted, or the seventh biggest, not adjusted.

    All these talks of civil war.. You cannot even move your ass to go to a demo. You think regular Americans are actually going to look at a Bradley, who can kill all the inhabitants of a house with one shot, and go like "yep, time to strap on the suicide vest!"

    Even those militia types.. Look at them. How far do you think they can run on average? How far with a backpack? They are just LARPing. 80% will stay home, 4% will go back home after the beer runs out, 15% will rat the others out to the Gestapo.

  • Get a refurbished Lenovo thinkpad t470 or so from ebay, make sure it has full HD and comes from a commercial shop. All the Thinkpads work great with Ubuntu. They are good quality business notebooks, easy to repair with good parts availability. You can probably get one around 150 or so.

    I repaired laptops for a living for a while and Thinkpads were always my favorite.

  • Seems weird to me, the router would need to do deep packet inspection of DNS and selectively block specific ones. It feels more like you've set up your DNS to do forwarding instead of resolution. Can you post a network diagram and the DNS config?

  • It's a gas where the chemical reaction of the combustion has produced enough energy to heat it up to a temperature where it emits visible light. Kind of like a glowing piece of metal, but in gas form.

    It's a mixture of black body radiation and individual spectral lines.

    The spectral lines happen when electrons fall from a high to a low energy state and the energy difference is emitted as light.

    Black body radiation describes the fact that everything constantly emits electromagnetic radiation (=light). But what kind of light depends on the temperature with colder bodies like us humans emitting infrared whereas warmer bodies like the sun emit visible light. That is also why light temperature is a thing and the unit is Kelvin.

    Here are some graphs and stuff: https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/648273/does-fire-emit-black-body-radiation

  • Just to be sure you do dig A @server $domain (with the "A") and can confirm the following

    SERVER is your server

    ;; ANSWER SECTION is empty (or doesn't exist)

    ;; AUTHORITY SECTION mentions your local DNS server

    Also check

    dig NS @server $domain

    Is your server in the answer section?

  • Here is how I would diagnose (I'm assuming you have Linux / WSL on a client)

    1. Check the DNS record is actually set (yes do it again)
    2. Do these steps on the client:
    3. dig $domain check which server answered
    4. dig a $domain should give a record
    5. dig a $domain @server to make sure you're querying the right server

    If none work, probably network issue (DNS boind to wrong IP, firewall, etc)

    If 3 and 5 work but 4 doesn't, your DNS isn't authorative.

    If only 5 works DNS settings on the client is wrong.

  • If you assume everything is compromised, there is no safety. You have to trust something at some point.

    Usually, speaking from a professional IT perspective, people trust encryption. Once you do that, it does not matter how safe or unsafe the place where you store your data is.

    AES, the encryption standard used by pretty much everything, is safe. It has not been weakened in any meaningful way since its inception and is also quantum - safe.

    You could use for example openssl or Veracrypt or even just 7zip to encrypt it. If you don't trust these tools, encrypt it twice with two different ones, just put a txt file next to it with the exact steps to decrypt, because you will forget in which order you have done things.

    Personally I have a homeserver that is encrypted at rest and then it uses restic to store encrypted backups in the cloud.

  • Its very unlikely for these reasons:

    • limited lifetime
    • we have already seen volcanic eruptions which put a lot of SO2 into the stratosphere, and thet did not cause an ice age, so it's clearly fine if we don't put too much

    Anyway, that's what research is for.