@IceSolst Do you know if it's a new cert with a mandatory new public/private key pair, or are you allowed to re-issue the cert with the same public key inside?
@ErikExplains@IceSolst Not to mention that, automating cert rotation also implies that somewhere in the process, something has the secret that authorizes the cert renewal in clear (or as good as), to be able to trigger that renewal without human intervention: that becomes a target
@Riwen08@awky2@WeillClaude Au niveau des coeffs, le bac S est bien plus équilibré (science/littéraire) que le bac L.
Une série de taules en matières littéraires plombent un bac S, alors que des mêmes taules en sciences sont peu perceptibles sur la moyenne totale en bac L
@Negius40@PandoraElfe Plutôt une question d'usage. En France, dans le langage courant, on utilise souvent "corbeau", même pour designer une corneille, voire un choucas. En Anglais, c'est "crow" (corneille) qui est le terme plus générique
@ErikExplains@UK_Daniel_Card LetsEncrypt might just be an acceptable compromise to get more HTTPS in use.
Before, you had to go through big CAs, often too expensive for small sites, and with a bit of marketing non-sense.
Their failures were rarely punished (too big to fail -> no removal from default bundles)
@pbeyssac@bortzmeyer Effectivement, mais souvent, les parties qui ne le sont pas (qui envoient des trucs pas complètement conformes) prennent tout simplement avantage de la tolérance de ceux qui sont flexibles en réception.
La deuxième partie du postulat est en fait une question de pouvoir
@bortzmeyer@pbeyssac Pas qu'en matière de sécurité.
Si Corp1 et Corp2 dévient tous les deux du standard en tolérant leurs écarts respectifs, c'est un casse-tête pour un nouvel arrivant qui ne fait pas partie de la clique et suit uniquement la spécification.
Ça a souvent été un pb dans l'open-source
@HCH_Hill@b_judah Just to point out that there are substantial differences in the French system between DROM (Overseas departments and regions of France) and COM (Overseas collectivities)
@bluetouff Le problème avec ce genre de code c'est que quelqu'un va copier/coller "juste pour tester", mais souvent personne ne le retire dans la version publiée
@worstall@agailtale@NaoShoo Not sure anyone is saying it's "oppression".
However, EU citizens do have an advantage in that they only have to worry about the expiry date of their passport.
(Unfortunately, he should have checked, and those who booked his tickets should have forwarded the airline reminders.)
@BasPortie39604@worstall@NaoShoo Irish citizens can go through the same easy path as any other EU citizens.
What might have happened is that some of them were dual UK/Irish nationals (as an example, quite frequent) but used their UK passport to cross the border
@worstall@agailtale@NaoShoo Had the UK remained in the EU, UK nationals would have still been able to travel anywhere in the EU+4 with a valid passport (up to the last day of validity at least).
Now they're subject to rules for non-EU nationals: passport not older than 10 years, extra 3 months, EES, etc
@worstall@agailtale@NaoShoo I think you were mentioning Schengen initially, but those are different topics.
Schengen is about being able to cross borders within the area without having to present documents.
EU citizenship gives you preference treatment to enter any EU country (+4): e.g simple ID validity
@worstall@agailtale@NaoShoo The subtly here is that you don't have to present it at the border within Schengen (not illegal to cross the border without presenting those documents).
Each country may then have its own rules as to when you need to (or should) carry ID (even for its own nationals)
@worstall@NaoShoo "As an EU national, you have the right to travel freely in the 27 EU member countries as well as in Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland [...] carrying either a valid passport or a national identity card [...]. Your travel document must be valid on the day of travel."
@MichaelRosenYes@QLulabelle It is related to Brexit in the sense that, had you still been an EU national, you would only have needed a passport or an ID card "valid on the day of travel".
https://t.co/3DK9KXMdz8
@IceSolst@theo Maybe over-dramatic, but I wonder whether individuals will still be able to buy reasonably priced beefy hw. (Datacentre market killing high-end/custom PC market, e.g. if the RAM costs at the moment are not just temporary.)
HW aside, we might not be able to run what we want either