Who needs private variables when you can generate cryptographically secure variable names? Much better security.
Who needs private variables when you can generate cryptographically secure variable names? Much better security.
Where are you located? I’m in need of some new backup drives and would be happy to pay a reasonable price + shipping if you’re interested.
It’s great, just give your cloud servers public IPs and you get tons of completely free vulnerability scans! This life hack has saved me tens of thousands of dollars in pentesting.
It’s completely insane that the tool would attempt to connect to a nonexistent bucket for backups by default instead of just… having them disabled completely?
Gotta review the 5 line PR ten times just to make absolutely totally sure there’s nothing wrong with it before submitting it.
It can if you set up proper security but, well, the US government isn’t exactly known for that.
Nice shot! Totality was a true sight to behold, but partial eclipses are really awesome too.
Ctrl+Shift+T T T T T T T T
SSHing into my less powerful machines takes a good few seconds, so I’m not sure if I’d notice an extra 500ms. For the more powerful ones that are basically instant it would be much more noticeable.
Gotta put on those invisible tracking codes.
Always a relevant xkcd.
What’s even up with that guy? What’s he trying to accomplish? Spammers confuse me.
Now recursively create more layers until you have barely any free space left on the disk, then do some performance benchmarks. ;)
Seems like it would be fairly inefficient having to encrypt and decrypt data twice.
I had to pipe dd through gzip over SSH recently to locally image a disk on a cloud server. That was fun.
Screw calculating values for variables, just initialize it pointing to a random memory address and get a value for free! (Assuming your program doesn’t segfault).
deleted by creator
I just grabbed the original program from Wikipedia and put it in a code block.
Looks like the backticks in the program messed up the formatting a bit, here’s it with fixed formatting.
(=<`#9]~6ZY327Uv4-QsqpMn&+Ij"'E%e{Ab~w=_:]Kw%o44Uqp0/Q?xNvL:`H%c#DD2^WV>gY;dts76qKJImZkj
Not that it’s any more intelligible. :D
No need for all these new-fangled tools when good ol’
dd
does the job just fine. (Though they certainly reduce the chance of accidentally nuking the wrong disk).