Given... recent events... I'll probably post mainly on Mastodon from now on.
One upside of what's happening to Twitter is that Mastodon is getting a lot more popular!
[While opening a misconfigured S3 bucket]
"This... is a bucket."
"Dear God..."
"There's more."
"No..."
"It contains the private keys of every man here."
#kawaiicon
https://t.co/ySzDvgt3IJ
oh no, individual websites can go down because of too much traffic.
obviously, the solution is to centralise the entire internet through one company!
surely it will be reliable and not cause the kind of predictable problems that the decentralised internet was designed to avoid
If you're sharing a tweet link, please remove the tracking parameters (?s=...&t=...). Same goes for any link, but after Twitter recently introduced the 't' parameter, polluted links are everywhere...
@cooljqln@metashibe A bit late (I just stumbled across this), but...
Yes, they do. The first TLS certificate is from October - a few days before the company was registered: https://t.co/sfwoF8MMYM
The certificate transparency log is great for stuff like that.
The "Russian MoD leak" is fake.
The contents:
- old passwd template from FreeBSD
- VLC source code
- public keys for VLC
- package metadata for VLC
- "https://t.co/WFSI7S5Jnq & mil logins.txt"
The .txt, AFAICT, is probably from past breaches of other sites.
@asiamart_ Property managers aren't regulated, so all you can really do to avoid bad ones is to carefully read reviews.
Though hopefully that'll change soon:
https://t.co/1ti0U1cyuT
@asiamart_ I've talked to Tenancy Services before about a similar situation. Had to wait in the hold queue for a while, but they're very helpful and can tell you exactly which parts of the Residential Tenancies Act the property manager is violating.