I signed up for a website recently that checked my password against https://haveibeenpwned.com/ and warned me that my password has been compromised (which in my case was fine since it was a throwaway account.) I'm surprised this isn't a thing on more sites.
Related, maybe even inspired by https://dribbble.com/shots/4249163-Animated-login-form-avatar
Always fun to see people's experimental stuff be used elsewhere, hopefully this will get the ball rolling and more sites will use logins that aren't completely sterile and bland
If it keeps misbehaving, I'd reccomend replacing that with Simon Tatham's Puzzles, which includes infinite free sudokus ("Solo", it calls it), is free, and has no ads or IAPs.
> sending the same code to the ad server
Hence it connects to the ad server -- that's my point. uBO prevents network requests to ad servers, while this allows requests to ad servers. In the spirit of informed consent, this is a key point which needs to be understood by whoever uses AdNauseum: you will end up establishing connections to ad servers -- and thus one needs to be aware of all the consequences of such connections. See <https://github.com/gorhill/uBlock/issues/67#issuecomment-93776540>.
> uBlock does not prevent connections to ad servers, it removes HTML elements
Wrong.
Blocking outgoing connections is how uBO works primarily, it's called network filtering.
There is cosmetic filtering as a secondary mechanism -- and cosmetic filtering does not cause HTML elements to be removed, they are simply hidden from view using stylesheets.
I'm not 100% sure, but I think it was this app. It sucks, though, because shortly after I posted this, I played with the app a bit more and found out that the app showed full screen ads regardless of the ad type you chose. Not very anti-asshole design after all.
Why does that belong here? Any proxy extension will cause that, such as FoxyProxy, because theoretically it could be malicious and reroute your traffic through an attacker.
Edit: r/lostredditors - I thought I was in r/assholedesign
Telegram apps are open source for one. All forms of encryption and transportation are not equal either. I would recommend researching both options if this is something you want to consider. Here is a good starting point: https://telegram.org/faq#q-how-secure-is-telegram
BESy Retractable Clothesline SUS304 Stainless Steel Clothes Dryer with Adjustable Stainless Steel Rope String Hotel Style Heavy Duty,9.2 Feets,Polished Chrome Finish, Round Style https://www.amazon.com/dp/B074GPRL7L/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_glc_fabc_Ly98FbJGH5XVT
I bought one and installed it into my shower stall after spending a lot of time traveling a few years ago. I also got one of those wall-mounted fold-out makeup mirrors that hotels have. Both items are invaluable, and I recommend for every home.
Edit: Installed directly above my shower, not inside. 😊
It's nice that they stop sending you notifications when you stop clicking on them. Although this feature is now native in Android Pie. Android will offer to permanently hide notifications that you swipe and never click. But there is also a hint of guilt here, like "we are so ashamed that you won't practice that we're just going to give up to you." It actually encouraged me to start practicing again.
In case anyone is wondering, the icon pack is twopixel (running on Nova Launcher of course) and the background I found on Reddit (the non-iphone version is in the comments)
I'd still consider both heavily insecure. This is already demonstrated through a synchronisation attack on WhatsApp Link, German; Telegram isn't using encryption by default for conversations.
Plus it's a misconception that Telegram is open source. Parts of their clients are. See https://telegram.org/apps
A Chinese AV called 360 Total Security. It has ads (it's free) and it's bad at detection with its default engine (but ~mediocre if you install the Avira and Bitdefender engines in it). Why do I still use it? Recently I started using Malwarebytes "with it" and I was surprised that it had features even Malwarebytes didn't have (e.g. tools like sandbox ["VM for programs"]; warning you when a program makes "risky" changes [in the registry for example], etc...). I'm looking for an alternative AV though and if I can find one that "suits my needs" I will switch over.
I believe that's correct. For example:
>The Signal Sheet keeps you ahead of run-outs (final 10 tissues are cream instead of white, so you'll know it's time to replace the box)
you can usually find stuff like this by searching "sink tap extension"- Amazon link
Well, it sure ain't LibreLingo, but I'm not sure it's any worse than the average proprietary software these days.
Is there some specific aspect of it that's particularly bad?
"We'll build fiber infrastructure throughout your city giving all your citizens access to the fastest speeds for a nominal cost. All we ask for is if we're spending that much to deploy fiber that you enable us to recoup our cost through exclusivity to your citizens (and some tax breaks)"
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/the-book-of-broken-promis_b_5839394
I'm a little confused by what you mean with system, but, generally, GOG (formerly known as "Good Old Games" is a DRM-free games platform for computers (meaning Windows, Mac OS and Linux operating systems). The games come in standalone installers which you can install on as many machines as you want.
It's about £11 a month.
But it's not necessary if you're not looking for security, accessing geoblocked content, avoiding your ISP throttling you for certain content, etc. etc. You're basically completely invisible and untraceable to your government or your ISP, but you should always "flight check" before you actually go anywhere or do anything you shouldn't even if you have it turned on, such as checking these sites here and here
The ads make it out to seem the internet without a VPN is a minefield, but it's only a minefield if you click every popup, every ad, open every email in your junk folder. Just get uBlock Origin (free extension) if you don't wanna do anything I listed.
DBrady is the redditor who develops Relay for reddit. I've been using it for years and still think it's the best option for Android.
Play store link : Relay for reddit
This one isn't a game it's called Fullscreen clock. Here is link to play store https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.lesorin.fullscreenclock and you can use all options when it's toggled off, it just gives you a sad face. Also with ads on you have no pop-ups just this stripe in settings.
Hypothesis: you have many Relay for reddit users. Relay currently has the weird problem that it crashes if you use the forth report option, which is "not AAD". So people might PM you out of technical problems.
May I ask which VPN you use and what cellphone service? When I was in China I used NordVPN and China Unicom on mobile, but it frequently dropped the connection and I had to restart it. I noticed that at China Telecom Wi-Fi it never happened, so maybe the company affects how the VPN performs?
It has peaked my curiosity. I have the demo version (which sucks) but have been hesitant to get a VPN just because I hear bad things about all of them it seems. But if NordVPN is located in Panama where they aren't legally required to store data, that does sound pretty nice
Only that international corporations need to comply to offer their products to the world. Considering they usually prefer having only one version, this applies EU laws to practically every corporation that wants a service to be available to the EU, otherwise they won’t allow it. So NordVPN still has to tell you about the renewal of your subscription, by law.
Depends on what they want it for. For privacy and protection Freedome is great and as they are a Finnish company they aren't obligated to follow US spying laws, but on the flip side they do keep the law required logs that they will release to the Finnish courts if told to and most if not all of their servers are banned by netflix.
I personally use Freedome though, as all I really care about is not getting copyright troll "lawsuits" and using public wifi slightly more securely.
I got a similar set off Amazon except they're magnetic, and I really like them. Link here: Measuring Cups and Magnetic Measuring Spoons Set