People will say you should be afraid of the batteries exploding or venting. I’m honestly not too concerned, but be sure to check them maybe once or twice a year.
I’m more concerned with the power supply. Laptop power supplies often heat up a lot.
Computers and the internet gave you freedom. Trusted Computing would take your freedom.
Learn why: https://vimeo.com/5168045
People will say you should be afraid of the batteries exploding or venting. I’m honestly not too concerned, but be sure to check them maybe once or twice a year.
I’m more concerned with the power supply. Laptop power supplies often heat up a lot.
why does it look like bash?
1, 90 or 9 minutes, in any case it needs a speaker to be watched, and often mobile data cap when not at home.
and a fair amount of rewinds for a lot of non-native english speakers knowers
forgot this part
P.S. I’m guessing OP doesn’t actually have a CA and is just using simple self signed certificates without any private CA that has signed them.
I assume that too, however the person I responded to recommended using a full fledged CA cart.
but it’s their CA so why would they do that?
I don’t mean them specifically, but that to me managing access to such a CA cert’s keys is security nightmare, because if I somehow get an infection, and it finds the cert file and the private key, it’ll be much easier for it to make itself more persistent than I want it.
But if you don’t trust your own CA what’s the point of having a CA?
That’s the point. I don’t recommend having one. I recommend self signed certs that are
Or if you don’t want to deal with self signed certs, buy a domain and do lets encrypt with the DNS challenge.
That’s also more secure, but can be more of a hassle, though I guess it depends on preference.
But then I would use this latter one too if I had opened any services to the internet, but I didn’t because I don’t need to.
oh, I see now, sorry! from mechanical I instantly thought you mean an HDD
you should only need to allow this once for each domain/subdomain, surely that can’t be that much of a pain.
yes that has to be repeated when the certificate changes, but make it with a 2-5 year expiration and it’ll be safer than attempting to disable these security measures for all domains, which would be just very silly and careless
does not sound like a good idea. your own CA can sign certs for any other sites too, and it’s dangerous.
I would say it’s even more dangerous of you just think “nah, it’ll be fine”
they don’t have any business with my fucking personal phone! where do you live, in the USA? if I only use an old dumb phone, they have no business about it! they can reach me when necessary, and that’s all they need to care
yeah, but for OP’s amount that’s an overkill, the drives are very expensive
unless you span multiple boxes of discs which is a pain in the ass
FTFY
with two drives (preferably different brands/age, HDD or SSD doesn’t really matter) in it using a checksumming filesystem like btrfs or ZFS so that you can do regular scrubs to verify data integrity.
an important detail here is to add the 2 disks to the filesystem in a way so that the second one does not extend the capacity, but adds parity. on ZFS, this can be done with a mirror vdev (simplest for this case) or a raidz1 vdev.
went with an ssd in this idea since its more durable than a mechanical, better price for storage capacity
how? sorry but that does not add up to me. for the price of a 2 TB SSD you could by a much larger HDD
and most likely to be compatible with other computers in the future in case you need it for whatever reason.
both of these use SATA plugs, it should be the same
there is 0% risk until your country makes a law that prohibits any and all P2P communication. That would not only break torrents, but would thwart signal/telegram/whatsapp calls too, Jitsi meetings, probably google meet and zoom too, as all those use P2P traffic for performance.
So far there are only such laws in far east countries, and the official java I2P router is smart enough to not participate in routing when you are in such a place.
Also, I think for routing to work you need to open a port, without it that won’t be done.
as a node
I know nothing about seedboxes, but on a computer you can point multiple torrents to the same directory. If you make it read-only, by permission or mount options or whatever, the torrent client can’t even fuck it up
yeah take it up with a blackholed email address, while being locked away from public transport and a lot of otherbasic services that’s literally needed for life, for saying hard no to literal malware on my phone? I think you’re a little backwards.
my employers have never specified any requirements for my phone, sorry but wtf is that?
from google play? on my degoogled phone?
in my understanding offset is technically the “relative index”, or how much you have to go further