Run Vaultwarden within your LAN and give this application no outgoing network access except to your local Vaultwarden ?
lemmyreader
Right. Thanks for sharing that thought. The weird thing was that the warning was about the domain name not being listed except for two other domains including one wildcard. Maybe it has to do with the fact the Drew had to deal with severe DDOS attacks some time ago, and had to move and rebuild services which may have included their blog. I had this with Tor browser, and then tested with LibreWolf configured for Tor and got the same error (I didn't check the details of the two Tor circuits) I made a screenshot of the warning.
ack. I've updated my comment.
Would changing swappiness make a difference ? https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Swap#Swappiness
- For servers monit, a simple monitoring tool, can alert via email when CPU or RAM usage is too high. Is there something like that for desktops ?
This OpenBSD developer is where I got the link from : https://bsd.network/@solene/112337523889864324 and there's Goldwarden, a desktop app for Bitwarden : https://flathub.org/apps/com.quexten.Goldwarden
Your question reminded me of TabFS https://omar.website/tabfs
Examples of stuff you can do!
- List the titles of all the tabs you have open
- Cull tabs like any other files
- Close all Stack Overflow tabs
- Save text of all tabs to a file
- Evaluate JavaScript on a page / watch expressions: demo
- Get images / scripts / other resource files from page
- Retrieve what's playing on YouTube Music: youtube-music-tabfs
- Reload an extension when you edit its source code
- TODO: Live edit a running Web page
- TODO: Import data (JSON? XLS? JS?)
Mull browser is heavily focused on privacy and security. Here's known issues for Mull browser :
SearX and SearXNG instances, YMMV :
👍 Thanks for sharing.
!remind 10 years when they will release the source code of Windows 3.0 for non-commercial use
(3.11 will take another 10 years)
I'm not the blog author nor do I know the blog author. Got the link from here : https://infosec.exchange/@firstyear/112335226264184474
EDIT : I used the cross post option during posting in three different places. Later I noticed that one bot did post it and another user posted it as well.
Good point. Makes me think that at some point in time no one was using KeePassXC (or KeePass or similar) or Bitwarden. Same for the first 2FA security keys. Who can you trust ? There will always be a trust decision to make or audit or have it audited or what not.