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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)D
Posts
6
Comments
112
Joined
11 mo. ago

  • The error was: ERR_CONNECTION_TIMED_OUT. I also got an ERROR_CONNECTION_REFUSED earlier.

  • Yes, that's what I did.

  • I can't connect to the domain at all. I think the certificate problem was because I was connecting with the IP address rather than the domain name.

  • I get ERR_CONNECTION_TIMED_OUT when trying to connect to it. I don't get any error logs on the server itself. I also got an ERROR_CONNECTION_REFUSED earlier.

  • I got my SSL certs from running certbot. I don't use DDNS.

  • I think they plan on making it ship with windows by default at some point, so perhaps it'll be in future versions of Windows Server and you won't have to add it.

  • Yeah this push to switch to Wayland is gonna be real annoying in the coming years.

  • Its making save editing real annoying. I went into it really confident without backing it up because I did it before and now my save is corrupted.

  • Ok, I figured. Maybe I'll finally check it out.

  • What show is this?

  • If I ever need to switch to the root user, I usually type su, but I saw someone use sudo su - in a video, which I thought was pretty strange but maybe the video creator knew something I didn't, or it wasn't possible to simply su a few years ago.

  • Soon

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  • It turns out they can and likely do track that sort of thing. Still, I highly doubt that's the only information they have access to.

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  • It could be possible, but what makes you suspect they're tracking cursor positions?

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  • I'm not entirely sure how they do it, but I do know alot of information is relayed to websites that can be used to fingerprint and track you. Even if you aren't logged in they know where you are and what device you are using. Alot of this depends on how hardened the browser you are using is, because its entirely up to the browser to block this information.

    You can try to confuse the data a bit with a VPN, but I'm not sure if a VPN alone counts for much these days.

    If you really want no fingerprint you can try either of these two technologies:

    TOR is a way to browse the internet that makes it very hard to fingerprint you. The network's bandwidth is limited and there are people in oppressive regimes who legitimately need this though, so I think it would be a waste to use it for regular browsing.

    WHONIX is used by Edward Snowden himself. Its an OS within a virtual machine that is entirely reset everytime its run. It has alot of built-in privacy tools, but its not very convenient to use.

    I personally use Brave with as many shield options on as possible, alongside a VPN when I think its necessary. On mobile I sometimes use Kiwi, which is unfortunately no longer available. Its the only browser I've found that actually masks whether your device is a phone or PC.

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  • Private mode deletes cookies and browsing history on your device, it has no impact on the amount of information sent out to browsers and your ISP.

  • I love this sort of thing. Is there a group that specifically focuses on computing history?

  • It seems to specifically be looking at users who have gone on US government websites. Its not measuring all devices in the country.

  • What is that device? Its like a DS but with two joysticks? I love it.

  • The politicians and lobbyists should unencrypt their data first to show us how safe it is.