Yeah I switched to PAYG to lessen the chance of that happening. So far I’ve managed to not accidentally spend $5000 in some dumb way, so it’s basically equivalent to the free tier.
Yep, it’s all backed up locally. I figure eventually they’ll shut it down as they’re losing a fair bit of money.
You can sign up here, and it comes with 200GB of storage and 10TB of monthly bandwidth. And apparently a $300 credit, that wasn’t around when I signed up.
Edit: Nevermind, must’ve not noticed it.
Yep, it’s Oracle. It’s a really great deal; I’ve been using their services for a couple years now and haven’t had any problems.
Some intern is having a bad day right now.
Yeah, I just left my SSH port as 22 since I only use key-based authentication so there’s really no security risk. Plus, it’s funny going through the logs and looking at all the login attempts.
If you’re looking for a new registrar, I’ve had only good experiences with NameSilo. They’re not the cheapest, but they’re generally cheaper than GoDaddy, don’t paywall arbitrary things like APIs or WHOIS privacy, and have good support.
Nobody’s stupid enough to connect their AI to their database. At least, I hope that’s the case…
That’s true. Though there are reviews saying their support is terrible, which I assume applies to B2 as well.
I would not use them, they have bad ratings on Trustpilot.
Better than eating a full sized SD card, at least.
I just went ahead and deleted anything that looked Edge-related from all the system directories. Sure, my computer won’t boot into Windows anymore, but all the more reason to use Linux!
Who needs private variables when you can generate cryptographically secure variable names? Much better security.
Where are you located? I’m in need of some new backup drives and would be happy to pay a reasonable price + shipping if you’re interested.
Interesting, I’ve never heard of that. What does it blinking signify?
It’s great, just give your cloud servers public IPs and you get tons of completely free vulnerability scans! This life hack has saved me tens of thousands of dollars in pentesting.
Gotta review the 5 line PR ten times just to make absolutely totally sure there’s nothing wrong with it before submitting it.
Slightly simpler, start at 1 and increment by 2 so you don’t have to check whether i is odd.
for (var i = 1; i < 100; i += 2) {
console.log(i);
}
It can if you set up proper security but, well, the US government isn’t exactly known for that.
If anyone wants to actually run this, here ya go:
#include <stdio.h> short i=0;long b[]={1712,6400 ,3668,14961,00116, 13172,10368,41600, 12764,9443,112,12544,15092,11219,116,8576,8832 ,12764,9461,99,10823,17,15092,11219,99,6103,14915, 69,1721,10190,12771,10065,16462,13172,10368,11776, 14545,10460,10063,99,12544,14434,16401,16000,8654, 12764,13680,10848,9204,113,10441,14306,9344,12404, 32869,42996,12288,141129,12672,11234,87,10086, 12655,99,22487,14434,79,10083,12750,10368, 10086,14929,79,10868,14464,12357};long n=9147811012615426336;long main(){ if(i<0230)printf("%c",(char)(( 0100&b[i++>>1]>>(i--&0x1)* 007)+((n>>(b[i>>001]>> 7*(0b1&01-i++)))&1 *main(111)))); return 69- 0b0110 ;}
Bonus points if you can deobfuscate it!