Yep it's Intel.
They said it up until their competitor started offering more than 4 cores as a standard.
Yep it's Intel.
They said it up until their competitor started offering more than 4 cores as a standard.
Pretty sure the NSA doesn't want the recovery key, they want the information the recovery key is protecting.
A more recent example:
"Nobody needs more than 4 cores for personal use!"
My go-to is always PCManFM.
Yes the name sucks, but I've never seen another file manager with tabs, split view, customizable buttons, buttonizable nav bar, and have three different gui kits to choose from (Qt5, gtk2, gtk3). Really hard to beat all that.
I see your decryption key extraction and offer you a 5 dollar wrench.
The wrench also comes with DMA (direct mechanical assault), RDMA (remote direct mechanical assault via throwing), and DDIO (deals damage if opposing) capabilities. It's a real NSA bargain!
Epub is also a super easy format to script with, allowing easy parsing of webpages to ebooks.
Life sure is harder for vampires these days. Not only do you have to worry about garlic and stakes, but there's also running tap water, concentrated solar energy, and Nvidia drivers going full brightness...
One way to do this would be set up crowdsec bouncers on each server but only run a single instance of the crowdsec daemon. Send all logs to the daemon and let it communicate with all the bouncers.
Sounds like a job for crowdsec. Basically fail2ban on steroids. They already have a ban scenario for attempts to exploit web application CVEs. While the default ssh scenario does not ban specific usernames, I'm pretty sure writing a custom one would be trivial (writing a custom parser+scenario for ghost cvs from no knowledge to fully deployed took me just one afternoon)
Another thing I like about crowdsec is the crowd sourced ban IPs. It's super nice you can preemptively ban IPs that are port-scanning/probing other people's servers.
It's also MIT licensed and uses less ram than fail2ban.
Is this an exclusively US thing? Back when I was in Asia there were always subtitled showings and non-subtitled showings. The better theaters even had a dedicated teleprompter at the bottom so the subtitles don't block the movie.
I mean they're not wrong...
This is why my next book will be titled "how to cook dinner without a compiler, GCC 4 to GCC 11 compatible!"