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Joined 3 years ago
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Cake day: July 10th, 2023

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  • I just bought a fridge after my 15 year old one shit out. Let me tell you, trying to find a decently sized, dumb fridge with an ice and water dispenser is like finding the holy grail.

    Samsung has evidently partnered with some timelords to get over 30 cu ft of fridge space in a 70"tall frame - including their door sized tablet.

    Bosch has the next biggest but locks stuff behind an smart app. Hell, even LG has smart features to help you with your ice maker that will probably either be DOA or will break in a year.

    I finally found a Whirlpool that isn’t smart and has a decent sized fridge, but it was a struggle.





  • pezhore@infosec.pubtoMemes@sopuli.xyzStay hydrated
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    6 months ago

    Good meme, but Bat Facts™️ time! Unlike birds, bats cannot take off to fly from the ground. If you see one like this, they could be injured or just stuck.

    If you see a bat on the ground like this, call your local wildlife rescue for instructions. They may have you try to transport the bat in a cardboard box to their location, or possibly put it on a nearby tree.


  • Well that’s the neat part! They campaign on how the government doesn’t work - then in an effort to “streamline” they reduce taxes/funding for things like roads and bridges. The infra starts crumbling but instead of constituents wanting more funding, they take the crumbling info as evidence of the mismanagement, and just claim the government sucks at what it does.

    At least, that’s how it is in Missouri.






  • Dude, have your pupillary distance checked. I got a pair of glasses from warby parker and used their “hold a business card to your nose so we can guess at that measurement”. This pair was instant fucking headaches until I went into one of their brick and mortar stores and they checked things.

    The focus point for my lenses was a good 5mm below where it should have been. My eyes are fucking bad and so I was basically looking through the distorted edge of high index lenses.

    A quick trip back to the shop for the lenses to get redone and now I can wear them comfortably.

    This is for anyone having issues with new glasses - if your prescription hasn’t changed that much from your prior year, but new glasses hurt or are severely uncomfortable, get that shit checked out. That shouldn’t be the case.

    For you, @OP - if you’ve always had a script but never been able to use your glasses due to headaches/motion sickness, get a different eye doctor. Don’t just go to a mall lens crafters, try to find an optometrist whose name is on the door. Tell them your symptoms. They should check your eyes for a plethora of things - maybe you’ve got astigmatism, or something else.

    It’s not normal to have a severe reaction to glasses if they’re the correct match for your eyes.



  • I can take a stab at this.

    So let’s talk Internet traffic first. When you go to a website, your device first has to do a DNS lookup to find out the IP address that corresponds to youtube.com. The DNS server sees your IP address and probably logs that request, and that it has responded. Next, your browser attempts to connect to the IP, get a response from youtube, and render it.

    If this was back in the day, youtube would probably let you connect with an unencrypted connection - http://youtube.com/, but pretty much everyone uses https these days (SSL encryption).

    Encryption is basically just a way to secure a connection from eves droppers (namely, your Internet service provider/government). But the end points of the encrypted communication (in the example above, your device and youtube) is decrypted at your browser and at their servers. All your ISP can see is the DNS lookup (assuming you are using their DNS servers, or that you aren’t doing something like DNS over HTTPS - encrypted lookups), after that all the youtube traffic is encrypted so your ISP just sees a bunch of data going to a specific IP address.

    So what does a VPN get you?

    Well, now your source IP when you reach youtube isn’t your phone or your home in Ohio, it’s wherever that VPN terminates. This is probably the best use for VPNs - to get around region locks.

    Your local ISP only sees the DNS request, then a bunch of encrypted traffic (same as before).

    But critically, the VPN owner can log every single bit of unencrypted traffic that passes through. Also, they can link your behavior to a paying account via username/password and payment methods (not great for privacy). They effectively fill the role of your original eves dropper - your ISP.

    So what did using a VPN actually do?

    • Your ISP no longer knows as much about your browsing, so I guess that’s good.
    • But now another 3rd party knows as much as your ISP did prior to using the VPN.
    • Your ISP doesn’t know your DNS lookups now, but your VPN provider might.
    • SSL traffic is still encrypted regardless - no change here.
    • YouTube doesn’t know your device’s original IP (maybe).

    The only other thing I’d say is that VPNs + torrents can may e protect you from DMCA take down notices. It’ll be that VPN termination IP that shows up in trackers, not your ISP provided IP.