Good read, I use crowdsec to block most of the traffic considered as malicious (which tend to overlap with scrappers), but I should look into Locaine to feed garbage to the remaining ones instead of throttling.
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xyro@lemmy.cato
Piracy: ꜱᴀɪʟ ᴛʜᴇ ʜɪɢʜ ꜱᴇᴀꜱ@lemmy.dbzer0.com•how to download encrypted usenet files with torbox?English
11·6 days agoYou need to provide the password to decrypt the data. Seems 404 is usually the password for g4u. Not sure how to input it in torbox
xyro@lemmy.cato
Linux@programming.dev•EndeavourOS Ganymede Arrives with Automatic NVIDIA Driver DetectionEnglish
1·13 days agoInstalled via the Ganymede iso, worked flawlessly. I’m impress on how far Linux distro have progressed. Nvidia card was detected and drivers properly setup automatically.
xyro@lemmy.cato
Open Source@lemmy.ml•Shai-Hulud round 2 on GitHub, massive leaks of data and propagation of stealerEnglish
1·22 days agoIt’s been a busy day…
Correcthorsebatterystable is not a good passwrod as it it just a combinaison of 4 words. Easy to crack with a dictionary attack
They want to send more data, but spent time to reduce the privacy impact with this feature. Data is still going somewhere that is not my computer and Mozilla is trying to force it as the new norm. Not a needed feature nor a requested one
Another Firefox feature I’ll have to disable. Ffs focus on the browser not integration with Google… SSO with entra is a PITA, but sure let’s focus on sending more data to search engines
xyro@lemmy.cato
You Should Know@lemmy.world•YSK tricks for one of the cheapest meals: beans and riceEnglish
45·2 months ago
xyro@lemmy.cato
politics @lemmy.world•Michael Wolff Launches Bombshell Lawsuit Against Melania Trump over EpsteinEnglish
6·2 months agoHaving perjury on record may allow further investigations and prosecutions
xyro@lemmy.cato
Firefox@fedia.io•Mozilla recruits beta testers for a built-in Firefox VPNEnglish
131·2 months ago“Our long-term vision is ambitious: to build the best VPN-integrated browser on the market.” What about building the best browser that does not fall behind all the Chromium-based browsers ffs?
xyro@lemmy.cato
Fuck Cars@lemmy.world•[positive post] What my morning commute looks like, guess what city!English
2·2 months agoLes cônes oranges trahissent un peu l’endroit 😜
xyro@lemmy.cato
Fuck Cars@lemmy.world•I guess running over cyclists can be funny now?English
2·3 months agoMy guess is that the downvotes are for the NSFW tag
xyro@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Why do Canadians online seem to hate Tim Hortons?English
2·4 months agoThis thread sparkled a national debate
xyro@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Do Indigenous people deserve “Special Status?” Not according to the Fraser Institute and the Financial Post English
131·4 months agoSpecial status seems to be an excuse to exclude first Nations from the rest of society, and get a good conscience about it.
I’m not debating the legitimacy of the law, just the technical feasibility for big compagnies to do it
A fine is just a took to force compliance. The company hosted outside of the justification is free to ignore the fine, but they should not expect the government to facilitate their operations within their jurisdiction, and thus apply additional sanctions
A fine is one possible sanction, imposing local network infrastructure to not carry your traffic is another one that can be used as a leverage to get the fine or to force to compliance a company.
Yes they can, intelligence/network compagnies like spur even sell this service, but I give it to you that as an individual it may not be a trivial task.
It’s another debate, but countries do have the authority to enforce their laws on their sovereign scope, which include network infrastructure located in the country, used to transport traffic from foreign compagnies.


Sad to see Mozilla becoming what they were supposed to protect us from…