

It’s not for spies, they’re the ones who don’t register. But diplomats and others legitimately working on behalf of a foreign nation are the ones expected to register.


It’s not for spies, they’re the ones who don’t register. But diplomats and others legitimately working on behalf of a foreign nation are the ones expected to register.


Christ.


What are you doing that requires 64 bit math or memory addressing?


What the article is say is, rather than trusting a service provider to protect your privacy, stick to using services you control,
😑


This makes zero sense… Protocols do not “exist”. They are run as services. And the entities behind those services can be subject to the laws of the jurisdiction they belong to.
The law doesn’t specify services, it specifies types of services. It doesn’t care what protocol you’re using.
And it is. You can pay for Mullvad with cash or bitcoin, but you can pay with VISA who will happily turn over your transactions to law enforcement.
Enforcement does not need to be perfect for the law to have an impact.


Did I explicitly state that I was aware of how this worked in my original comment? I did? Oh good.
Hence my “asked and answered” response. 🙄


Of course they do. 😂


Because the app isn’t updated until it’s restarted.
Do you think you applied that Firefox security update because you updated the flatpak? Because you haven’t if you left your browser running.


No, this is a new war which Congress totally doesn’t need to approve for 90 days.


Why did they ban you? Did you do something stupid like post a rant about reddit to a world news sub?


So what?


That looks ‘reasonably healthy’ - at least the service is running. I haven’t spent a lot of time debugging cups but the web interface may give a better view of what’s going on.
Since you’re on a remote system you can port-forward a local port to the remote host. ssh -L 8311:localhost:631 user@remotehost will forward “local” port 8311 to port 631 on the remote server. You can then point a web browser on your system at http://localhost:8311/ to connect to the CUPS daemon.


Does fedora use cups? Have you tried the web interface on port 631 (localhost:631)?


Professional? And you’re just switching vendors because you “want to”?


All Linux distros have the same drivers. The only difference will be in how up to date they may be. Some distros favor stability, others favor being “bleeding edge”.
The only standout is nvidia - some distros make it easier to install nvidia drivers. But you can install them on all distros.


The fact that I can’t “update” my software without closing it first.
Why can I do that with all other package formats? I get it won’t be the new version until I reopen the app
Asked and answered.


you can swap bash for zsh or ls for busybox without breaking the whole system
Is that so? rm -f /bin/bash and reboot. I’ll wait… Go ahead. You’ll be amazed at how many thing rely on bash. Or indeed sh which is why bash runs in bourne compatible mode when executed as /bin/sh.
The idea of Linux isn’t just about running big software, it’s about the ability to compose a system from independent parts.
This has never been true. The Linux kernel team themselves reject this silliness with a monolithic kernel that required a very specific toolchain to even build and run. Linux has always had tight integration.
We’ve had many competing implementations of some things (desktop environments come to mind) but that is not the same as “build a system out of Lego components” as a design goal. It’s what you get when you have no direction. It would be a very stupid design goal.
Your friendly reminder that you can seek whatever dollar figure you like in a lawsuit.