But installing a root CA on people own hardware, don't you think that is a step too far. It is not as if it is really easy to circumvent anyway. I have ssh running on port 80 and just tunnel everything through that to beat the schools surveillance.
Nothing of note. I did a GCSE in IT and it was rubbish, basically Facebook ethics and how to use Word.
I did not chose IT at A level even though I want to do CS at uni. This is because it is more Facebook ethics.
I remember one question on my GCSE paper was a table listing three phones and the question asked me which one had the most memory (not even specific as to whether it was RAM or Flash storage although i could infer it), what a stupid question. it was basically, which is bigger 100 or 200, also aparently examiners do not understand that usually flash memory chips come in base two divisions
This works really well, thanks. Why isn't this sort of thing default in browsers?
I am that one student, and I always share what I have done with the rest of the school, resulting in everybody being able to beat the filters.
But installing a root CA on people own hardware, don't you think that is a step too far. It is not as if it is really easy to circumvent anyway. I have ssh running on port 80 and just tunnel everything through that to beat the schools surveillance.
Perfect destruction is assured by snapchat, they have done what the NSA couldn't.
Nothing of note. I did a GCSE in IT and it was rubbish, basically Facebook ethics and how to use Word. I did not chose IT at A level even though I want to do CS at uni. This is because it is more Facebook ethics. I remember one question on my GCSE paper was a table listing three phones and the question asked me which one had the most memory (not even specific as to whether it was RAM or Flash storage although i could infer it), what a stupid question. it was basically, which is bigger 100 or 200, also aparently examiners do not understand that usually flash memory chips come in base two divisions