Show newer

@eniko Yep, that's unfortunately an extremely common view over here :(

And I'm constantly seeing news articles trying to invent the most absurd excuses as to why there's staff shortages everywhere, because nobody wants to admit that it's COVID even though all the evidence points that way

so @inherentlee 's thread asking people to define masculinity the other day had some uhh Interesting answers from (white, straight) cis men vs queer, trans, and nonbinary people. And I knew that cis people probably haven't really thought about this stuff before but some of these answers were kind of scary to be honest.

"The ability to suppress your own feelings is of course dangerous, but... embracing danger is itself masculine."

another one said "masculinity is being a danger to oneself and others"

uhh are you guys okay?

"Masculinity is conflict"
Also a lot of talk about the idea of how noble it is to push through discomfort.

Scientifically/historically dubious:
"Look to nature"
"evolution as hunter/gatherers"

And the cis answers included almost zero joy.

On the trans and queer side, beautiful, delightful answers about gay masculinity, trans masculinity, Black masculinity, an absolute universe of masculinities. And many people who couldn't define it if they looked at it too hard because many traits are shared by femininity, masculinity, and decent people. The divide is a vast chasm.

editing to add link to thread strangeobject.space/@inherentl

hahaha yes, I successfully triggered the iOS "your NFC secure element is too full, please delete some cards" UI!

for the unaware, Apple Wallet cards are really Java Card programs stored on an embedded Secure Element chip, separate from the main processor

this chip has limited storage! if you overfill it — say, by wasting $40 on TAP transit cards — it forces you to make room for more with this rarely-seen popup

@scanlime Exactly. It's the same kind of scam as in much of the corporate consulting world: if you just charge a high enough fee, nobody in the company will dare to question whether they are actually getting value for money because your head is going to be on the chopping block for pointing out the error of the higher-up, so why bother checking

@scanlime Don't have to actually be right if you can make your customers *believe* that you are right!

*taps forehead*

@scanlime Trying to look confident so that they can sell bigger data plans to companies trying to do 'competitor research', basically

We need a comma version of the exclamation point and question mark.

:ms_robot_error: I have to sleep with a fluoride paste on my teeth.

:ms_robot_grin: this one regularly strengthens its chassis through the application of a compound containing a highly reactive, toxic element for several hours.

The most common car occupancy isn't actually 1. If you count all the cars on the street, not just the moving ones, it's usually 0. Most cars are empty at any given moment.

@baldur I mean, with how normalized it has become for companies to be shitty with no recourse (ie. "free market politics"), that's not that surprising to me, even though that absolutely shouldn't be how it is

linux server security checklist 

@katnjiapus The recommendations I usually give people are basically:

1. Disable password authentication for SSH, and use keypair authentication only (these are two separate steps!). Changing ports is not needed, fail2ban also isn't really.

2. Either set up automatic system updates ("unattended upgrades", or whatever your distro of choice calls them) or have a scheduled event every week to update manually and keep track of security notices. The former is easiest.

Make sure to do full distro upgrades when a new release comes out; those are usually not automatic, even with automatic updates enabled.

3. When running public-facing services, if you *can* sandbox them, do so. On NixOS this is automatic for a lot of services, using Docker it's *sort of* sandboxed (but not very well, usually), on other systems you may have to do this manually but it can usually be done directly in the systemd service file.

That's... more or less it, as the basic steps? Like, there's a lot more that can be done, that's specific to the services you run (and often explained in their documentation), but if you get these few things right, you're already doing better than a lot of public-facing production servers.

Of course, if you intend to do something especially sensitive (eg. services for activists), you should be getting someone involved who has experience in this sort of thing. This list is just for your run-of-the-mill personal/community/small-company/etc. server.

--

To elaborate on the port changing and fail2ban thing a bit: these are really common recommendations but I don't find them useful in practice, and they bring their own issues.

The port-changing is a form of security-through-obscurity that dates back to when internet-wide scanners only scanned for SSH servers on port 22 for capacity reasons. This hasn't been relevant since zmap, and so doesn't do anything anymore besides "making you manually specify the port for any SSH-based tool like rsync".

The fail2ban recommendation comes from the password login days; it's a way to throttle login attempts so that someone can't bruteforce a password over the network. But with keypair authentication this is not relevant, as long as password auth is entirely *disabled*; the search space is so big that even without throttling you will never bruteforce a key.

*At best* it reduces log entries and slightly reduces CPU use, at the cost of making it very easy to accidentally lock yourself out if eg. you try to connect from a spotty mobile connection that has to reconnect a couple of times in a short time.

Please boost for reach! :boost_requested:

A friend of mine (currently based in NL) is looking for a remote job. They're looking for something related to web development, or maintenance of legacy codebases (web or otherwise).

They have experience with web/software development (Java, JS, assorted other web things), as well as reverse-engineering Java software, but no employment experience yet. Also a few years of basic NixOS experience.

They can pick up and learn new things very quickly, but they do need a work environment that is friendly to queer neurodivergent folks.

If you have a suitable job available (or something that's close enough - they're flexible!), please send me either a DM on here, or an e-mail at admin@cryto.net. I'll get you in touch with them.

Shower thought: One of the major reasons why the internet fucking sucks now is that with the consolidation of internet activity into a few cyclopean scale social media networks of various stripes, there is no place for anyone to have limited scope participation anymore.

For example, Instead of thousands of smaller, unconnected forums, it is just reddit. And everything you do on reddit can be cross-checked. The network effects of having everything on one thing means that it is incredibly easy for a bad actor to leverage your participation in various activities, your information, toward a bad end.

So a lot of people just don't. Don't make themselves vulnerable. At least on the open internet. All the forests and thickets have been burnt away, leaving you cold and alone on the tundra.

Which is also why I think Discord is kinda abused by people to try to replicate the forums, chatrooms, and small wikis of yesteryear. The open internet has no shelter anymore. The open internet is the dead internet because people die without shelter.

I'm reviewing a code change at work, and I think this dev actually ported an entire .NET application to PowerShell. It has classes, service architecture, and even a fucking Program class to mimic .NET's startup process.

I'm
astounded and actually a little impressed tbh ​:neofox_laugh_sweat:

#Programming #SoftwareDevelopment #CSharp #DotNet #PowerShell

Affordable USB microphone for speech (basically, talking over a screen share)? Don't need broadcast quality, would like an upgrade on the mic in my cheap webcam.

Blue snowball seems to be the de facto standard, other products in the same price range I should consider?

daily mail mention, UK attacks 

@libreleah It was baffling to see so many media just describe it context-free, as if it were the weather report, with absolutely no background on what happened or why.

It was even more baffling that the fucking *Daily Mail* was one of the very few sources I found that actually called them out as racist attacks and condemned them.

@eta Reminds me of my move. The 'professional' moving company I hired sent the wrong people (I asked for packing/tidying *and* moving, not just moving...) *several* times in a row.

Eventually told them not to bother anymore and just refund me, and managed to get a phone number of "a guy I once worked with" from one of the movers, called them up, made an appointment, et voila. Everything packed up and moved in a day, no issues.

Show older
Pixietown

Small server part of the pixie.town infrastructure. Registration is closed.