The site is not serving a valid TLS certificate. I wonder if the app browser is rejecting the site because of that (which IMO would be the correct thing to do).
lemmyng
Hey, Consul was pretty big for a while. But yeah, Terraform and Vault take the top two spots.
I don't know where you got the idea that I'm arguing that old versions don't get new vulnerabilities. I'm saying that just because a CVE exists it does not necessarily make a system immediately vulnerable, because many CVEs rely on theoretical scenarios or specific attack vectors that are not exploitable in a hardened system or that have limited impact.
GM had at one point been working on an eCrate block for conversions, but they seem to have abandoned it.
The tiles are way too aligned to be anything but a CAD generated picture.
The fact that you think it's not possible means that you're not familiar with CVSS scores, which every CVE includes and which are widely used in regulated fields.
And if you think that always updating to the latest version keeps you safe then you've forgotten about the recent xz backdoor.
For me Hyperion ended up giving me the closest out of the box experience to what I wanted.
Some of the classic RTS games perhaps, like C&C or Starcraft? They tend to be story driven and the most stats you tend to care about are "do I have enough resources" and "do I have enough units?"
I used to be a teaching assistant at university, and never sorted by name. But based on my experience I don't think it's frustration that accounts for the disparity, it's that as you see more and more assignments you start getting a feel for common issues and are able to point them out more easily. I would always do two passes because of that to ensure that I normalized the weight of my marking.
Just because it has a CVE number doesn't mean it's exploitable. Of the 800 CVEs, which ones are in the KEV catalogue? What are the attack vectors? What mitigations are available?
Haven't used it myself, but every person I know that tried Pulumi ended up going back to Terraform. From what I'm given to understand it is fine for small projects, but runs into problems at scale.
Personally I don't like the default SaaS/account required model in Pulumi. I have lots of things to dislike about Terraform, but that isn't one.
Mind you too with either tool you (or your devs) will still deal with Dockerfiles and Kubernetes manifests, you just would use Pulumi or Terraform or whatever to manage them.
Lastly: I have done the jump from Ansible to Terraform myself. If you have a large amount of machines to manage and want to minimize transition pains then don't just use vanilla Terraform, but instead go for a platform like env0 or Spacelift, or at least use Terragrunt to manage your plans.
Not sure what you are talking about. Paragraph 1 has
and the article makes it pretty clear after that that the user is tricked into installing the fake apk.