That's odd, one of the reasons I like systemd is that it *doesn't* eat process output. With sysvinit, non-syslog output would end up on/dev/console, scroll up and be lost forever (especially relevant for headless servers). With systemd's journalctl I can easily review the output of any process together with its syslog logs.
There's plenty of things about systemd that annoy me but that ain't one.
Assuming Signal uses some form of (elliptic curve) diffie-hellman, subpoenaing the private key will not allow the FBI to decrypt a single message. And since Moxie Marlinspike designed this system you can be sure it does.
The core functionality (WebRTC) is still there, they just removed their frontend. You can still use WebRTC in Firefox (or Chromium/Chrome) by visiting https://opentokrtc.com/. Chromium may be a better bet if you're behind a crappy firewall, because it supports TCP as well as UDP (Firefox only supports UDP).
We host an apt repository with a few packages for a bunch of debian and ubuntu releases. Of course you have to target the right dependency set, but that's true even when you target a specific version of either OS.
I was just miffed by the remark that Debian would not support PPAs, when in fact the whole technical groundwork is actually Debian's and all Ubuntu did was build a thin command interface over it and suddenly gets credited for the whole invention.
They also have extended the dpkg system with PPAs which (last time I checked) Debian did not support out of the box.
PPAs are basically just extra entries in/etc/apt/sources.list. That's a Debian feature, not an Ubuntu one. I certainly do appreciate the fact that Canonical offers easy and free hosting for personal repositories, but saying that Debian doesn't support PPAs is a bit weird.
Second google hit for "ubuntu maas" (for me) was http://www.ubuntu.com/cloud/maas. But yeah, it would have been nice if the link was included in the original question.
I was going to upgrade, just to see what it was like. First I tried to take a clone of hard drive, but somehow, during that process, my motherboard died and so I was without my laptop while it got repaired.
Tried that, but the wholy thing feels ‘clunky’ and often fails in various ways. Nowadays I just use Firefox Hello, which has the added advantage that all that is needed on the other side is a web browser (any web browser that understands webrtc).
Finally, I don't think Unix (any variant) uses apt-get? There might be one but I haven't met it. It has, of course, been a while since I have played with it.
Well, there's Debian GNU/kFreeBSD but that isn't an official Debian architecture just yet (unfortunately).
True. There's also WoSign (which uses the same root CA but is less restricted), but their OCSP-server is in China which will make the first connection a bit slow.
Wait, are you saying you want to own the means of production?
Maybe read this?
That's all fine and dandy, until your servant becomes part of a botnet and starts DDOSing me.
I don't think he's blaming the user, just making a polite request. If anything, he's blaming Slashdot for the bug (correctly).
That's odd, one of the reasons I like systemd is that it *doesn't* eat process output. With sysvinit, non-syslog output would end up on /dev/console, scroll up and be lost forever (especially relevant for headless servers). With systemd's journalctl I can easily review the output of any process together with its syslog logs.
There's plenty of things about systemd that annoy me but that ain't one.
Always 20/20.
Added irony: With pointer and memory allocation bugs, the problems are at least reproducible. Can't say that about threading bugs.
Sounds like you never had to debug a use-after-free bug.
Qihoo are also the owners of Startcom and Wosign. Oh dear.
Assuming Signal uses some form of (elliptic curve) diffie-hellman, subpoenaing the private key will not allow the FBI to decrypt a single message. And since Moxie Marlinspike designed this system you can be sure it does.
The core functionality (WebRTC) is still there, they just removed their frontend. You can still use WebRTC in Firefox (or Chromium/Chrome) by visiting https://opentokrtc.com/. Chromium may be a better bet if you're behind a crappy firewall, because it supports TCP as well as UDP (Firefox only supports UDP).
We host an apt repository with a few packages for a bunch of debian and ubuntu releases. Of course you have to target the right dependency set, but that's true even when you target a specific version of either OS.
I was just miffed by the remark that Debian would not support PPAs, when in fact the whole technical groundwork is actually Debian's and all Ubuntu did was build a thin command interface over it and suddenly gets credited for the whole invention.
They also have extended the dpkg system with PPAs which (last time I checked) Debian did not support out of the box.
PPAs are basically just extra entries in /etc/apt/sources.list. That's a Debian feature, not an Ubuntu one. I certainly do appreciate the fact that Canonical offers easy and free hosting for personal repositories, but saying that Debian doesn't support PPAs is a bit weird.
Second google hit for "ubuntu maas" (for me) was http://www.ubuntu.com/cloud/maas. But yeah, it would have been nice if the link was included in the original question.
I was going to upgrade, just to see what it was like. First I tried to take a clone of hard drive, but somehow, during that process, my motherboard died and so I was without my laptop while it got repaired.
Your computer chose death over Windows 10.
The cake is a lie, though.
Yahoo! are too incompetent to do anything evil with his mail.
You may like the Eizo EV2730Q.
There is another theory which states that this has already happened.
Tried that, but the wholy thing feels ‘clunky’ and often fails in various ways. Nowadays I just use Firefox Hello, which has the added advantage that all that is needed on the other side is a web browser (any web browser that understands webrtc).
Only the Food Industry could make fruit unhealthy.
:(
WTF is with this thread? Is Dice paying people to generate fake comments now?
Finally, I don't think Unix (any variant) uses apt-get? There might be one but I haven't met it. It has, of course, been a while since I have played with it.
Well, there's Debian GNU/kFreeBSD but that isn't an official Debian architecture just yet (unfortunately).
To defend you from other lawyers?
and I'll keep blocking your ads.
True. There's also WoSign (which uses the same root CA but is less restricted), but their OCSP-server is in China which will make the first connection a bit slow.