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Waryle
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Waryle@jlai.luto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•How to harden against SSH brute-forcing?English13·5 months agoYou can look up for:
- Setting up max authentication attemps per connection -> slows up a lot brute force attacks. If your password is strong enough, that’s already a big step to secure your server.
- Generate SSH Keys and disable password authentication -> do this only if you’re connecting through the same devices, because you won’t be able to connect from any device that has not being set up. Personally I don’t use this because I want to be able to access my server even if I’m not home and without my laptop
- Set up Crowdsec -> it’s a local service which scans logs and will block access to any suspicious IPs. It also relies on a crowdsourced list of IPs that are identified as threat and will preventively block them
Thanks for sharing your researches
I live 2000km from Chernobyl
Chernobyl is not comparable to a nuclear bomb. Chernobyl is a reactor, made to release a steadily amount of radiations for years to make electricity.
Chernobyl irradiated a large area because the graphite that was located in the reactor core has burned, and the fumes have been carried by the wind, taking a lot of high-level activity nuclear waste hundred or thousands of kilometers away.
A bomb is way smaller than a reactor, and is designed to release most of its energy instantly to make the biggest explosion possible. That means a short burst of radioactivity very high level of radioactivity, with a very small half-life.
A few days after a bomb explodes, most of the radiations would have depleted.
CPU will draw a lot of energy just sitting idle, so if you don’t have something solid to throw at it, just leave it.
Where did you get that idea from? i7-6700k can idle at lower than 4W
Brb, I must warn my ancestors of 1789 that they should have overthrown the monarchy by discussing politely rather than by cutting off the king’s head and fighting his henchmen
Waryle@jlai.luto Fediverse@lemmy.world•Every Country That Has Their Own Lemmy InstanceEnglish65·6 months agoDon’t bother, he’s a pro-china anti-western shill, his comment history is a mess
Waryle@jlai.luto Fediverse@lemmy.world•Mastodon is working to add the controversial 'quote posts' feature | TechCrunchEnglish13·7 months agoMost instances will stop allowing new accounts to be created when it reaches a certain size that gets difficult to manage (hardware and moderating-wise). They self-regulate that way, and instances that get out of control will just be defederated by the others.
Waryle@jlai.luto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Help with Home Server Architecture and Hardware Selection?English6·7 months agoZFS Raid Expansion has been released days ago in OpenZFS 2.3.0 : https://www.cyberciti.biz/linux-news/zfs-raidz-expansion-finally-here-in-version-2-3-0/
It might help you with deciding how much storage you want
Waryle@jlai.luto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•What is the argument for making poor/working class folks shoulder the burden of taxes?101·10 months agoThat’s not brain drain. Brain drain is when high qualified people leave their country, mostly because of the lack of infrastructures costing them opportunities for studying or working in their respective field.
What you’re talking about is capital flight. This is an issue that is systematically raised as a counter-argument by liberals in debates on taxation. The problem is that it is seriously overestimated:
- Leaving a country is a lot more complicated than it sounds: you lose your family, your friends, your culture, your habits. Many millionaires who leave their country end up coming back after a few years.
- You can’t relocate your real estate investments.
- Going abroad doesn’t exempt you from paying taxes (especially exit taxes).
- A country that wishes to do so can prohibit the relocation of a profitable company, or even nationalize it.
- Many rich people who threaten to leave if taxes are raised end up doing the math: if there’s a profitable business, they’ll stay. And in a country that finances its infrastructure soundly and has a good distribution of wealth, there’s profitable business to be had.
Waryle@jlai.luto Linux@lemmy.ml•Extensions in GNOME 45 - New import system is not backwards compatible2·2 years agoGnome Shell has been first released in 2011.
You can’t use Netflix without paying, it’s a subscription. You can use Hyprland without paying anything, you pay because you’re willing to support the project, it’s a donation.