IllNess

joined 2 years ago
[–] IllNess 1 points 43 minutes ago

Never trusted them over the emissions testing thing.

[–] IllNess 5 points 13 hours ago

Someone looking to match their golden toilet.

[–] IllNess 3 points 1 day ago

Looking at OP's responses, I think your assumption is correct.

[–] IllNess 11 points 1 day ago

We should get rid of this one illegal immigrant stealing from us.

[–] IllNess 6 points 1 day ago (2 children)

When OP said chopping board I thought he meant to chop or saw wood on.

[–] IllNess 8 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I'll take a look. Thanks.

My favorite is Metropolis (1927).

[–] IllNess 5 points 2 days ago

I'll do my research. Thank you for the info.

[–] IllNess 8 points 2 days ago (2 children)

I wanted to move to the Netherlands because of their biking culture. But citizenship is difficult and I don't speak Dutch.

[–] IllNess 5 points 2 days ago (1 children)

You can sometimes find your bike in a nearby market for a fee. By a fee I mean they stole it and they are selling it back to you.

[–] IllNess 1 points 2 days ago (1 children)

So your logic for using Tor is because you can hide a server behind one and people understand the risk. And the only thing that prevents the government from busting people from illegally accessing their own servers is effort.

Why would you suggest using anything that you yourself considers a risk?

But this post is about accessing government servers, which aren't onion servers. Creating servers is irrelevant in this discussion. I'd rather use a service that hasn't failed it's users, which hides IP addresses. When Mullvad got raided, the police couldn't do anything. It was a dead end for them. With Tor, that has been far from the case over and over again.

[–] IllNess 1 points 2 days ago (3 children)

Several VPNs claim they don't keep logs. I trust Mullvad. Mullvad got raided. The police found nothing.

I trust a trusted VPN over a technology created by the government and that has frequently been broken by them.

Compare the amount of arrest of Mullvad users versus Tor users, logically for me at least, I found my answer. If you trust Tor to access government websites illegally, I say go ahead. I wouldn't.

[–] IllNess 2 points 2 days ago (5 children)

https://www.forbes.com/sites/kashmirhill/2014/11/07/how-did-law-enforcement-break-tor/

FBI kept information to themselves of how they did it and this isn't the first time.

Also I wouldn't trust accessing a site administered by the government on Tor if onion sites can't keep me anonymous.

 

Cross posted from: https://feddit.org/post/8191819

 

Security researchers have discovered an arbitrary account takeover flaw in Subaru's Starlink service that could let attackers track, control, and hijack vehicles in the United States, Canada, and Japan using just a license plate.

Curry says Subaru patched the vulnerability within 24 hours of the researchers' report and was never exploited by an attacker.

 

A North Korean threat group has been using a technique called RID hijacking that tricks Windows into treating a low-privileged account as one with administrator permissions.

 

The CloudSEK researchers disrupted the botnet by utilizing hard-coded API tokens and a built-in kill switch to uninstall the malware from infected devices.

 

"Mac Homebrew Project Leader here. This seems taken down now," tweeted McQuaid.

 

To safeguard against such attacks, it's advised to monitor suspicious processes, events, and network traffic spawned by the execution of any untrusted binary/scripts. It's also recommended to apply firmware updates and change the default username and password.

 

A malicious package named 'pycord-self' on the Python package index (PyPI) targets Discord developers to steal authentication tokens and plant a backdoor for remote control over the system.

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