Posts by phil@fed.bajsicki.com
 (DIR) Post #ArzAm5j2vVnhZVrm4W by phil@fed.bajsicki.com
       2025-03-12T17:41:14.164Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @verita84@shit.poster.place @i@declin.eu Not as far as I know. Even if it did, why would my home IP be blocked by default?
       
 (DIR) Post #ArzCpfBtivGiLJBzaS by phil@fed.bajsicki.com
       2025-03-12T17:47:14.618Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @verita84@shit.poster.place @i@declin.eu Nope, nothing referring to my IP, ISP, hostname, etc. etc. in the config files.
       
 (DIR) Post #ArzCpgL9S0GTuIWteK by phil@fed.bajsicki.com
       2025-03-12T17:57:36.205Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @verita84@shit.poster.place @i@declin.eu Even stranger, running the wazuh-authd daemon in the foreground with debugging enabled, on port 1516, and then curling into it from localhost, I get this...It's like the packets are hitting the system, but not being routed to the actual application. I have zero clue.
       
 (DIR) Post #ArzD7Y80im6jeOu2zo by phil@fed.bajsicki.com
       2025-03-12T18:06:17.114Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @i@declin.eu @verita84@shit.poster.place Sure, but the problem is, the wazuh-agent isn't connecting either.
       
 (DIR) Post #ArzDrN9JsAE8vAMhxw by phil@fed.bajsicki.com
       2025-03-12T18:15:15.540Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @i@declin.eu @verita84@shit.poster.place Already done. I've been on this for two days, I'm genuinely convinced it's ghosts.
       
 (DIR) Post #ArzJNfy7wAbqKHLwVk by phil@fed.bajsicki.com
       2025-03-12T19:12:58.779Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       Is was nftables after all... good lord. I don't even know what rule I was breaking, but explicitly allowing the ports solved the issue.@verita84@shit.poster.place @vokainen099@cawfee.club  @i@declin.euThanks!RE: https://fed.bajsicki.com/notes/a59pyxuwzd
       
 (DIR) Post #ArzKkMfvw56n6SE3fs by phil@fed.bajsicki.com
       2025-03-12T19:32:47.088Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @verita84@shit.poster.place @vokainen099@cawfee.club @i@declin.eu Yeah I ended up making the changes in /etc/nftables.conf and then reloading. Files are so much better than dealing with weird CLIs that have unclear consequences.
       
 (DIR) Post #ArzKkNhk6q9MIM518K by phil@fed.bajsicki.com
       2025-03-12T19:33:21.488Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @verita84@shit.poster.place @vokainen099@cawfee.club @i@declin.eu E.g. ufw writes rules to nftables.conf (apparently), but... it doesn't write all of them. 1514 and 1515 were in UFW, but not in nftables somehow.
       
 (DIR) Post #As1IOFvCYQHCC4cJhw by phil@fed.bajsicki.com
       2025-03-13T18:16:27.675Z
       
       2 likes, 1 repeats
       
       @verita84@shit.poster.place No, it's really not over for the independent web. It's over for Mozilla, though. The reason the web is closed in the first place is because groups and companies like Mozilla are constantly striving for interoperability with corporate, mainstream platforms. It's okay to be different. It's okay to lack features. It's okay to be gopher or gemini. It's A-ok to make your web site literally an index.txt file and make your visitors copy-paste URLs into their address bar.Fancy, flashy, and full of advertisements isn't an "open web." It's a prison for rats. And the main way I have seen Mozilla combat this is by... remaining compatible with the mega-cancerous developments Google has been pushing into the Internet.A set of standards and specifications that are intrinsically anti-consumer is one we should reject, rather than emulate. Mozilla has failed on that front.
       
 (DIR) Post #As1UV9n6wcZ6eotEgq by phil@fed.bajsicki.com
       2025-03-13T20:32:15.520Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       I'm currently on a month-to-month contract with my ISP. They keep on calling me, trying to make me both pay more for features I don't need, and force me into a 24 month commitment. Every time it's a different person, every time they say there's no option for a month-to-month contract, even though they have that option online when I look for it. This wasn't a thing until a few months ago, never got any calls like that over the last years. Anyone know any ways to make them stop calling?
       
 (DIR) Post #AtLf3muARsewUav6FE by phil@fed.bajsicki.com
       2025-04-21T17:57:15.792Z
       
       0 likes, 1 repeats
       
       Normalize sending people plain text files instead of making them log in to proprietary services to read your two pages of notes.There's zero reason to use things like Word or Google Docs for purely textual, written word.There's zero reason why I should register with a service and use up a thousand (or more!!!!) times more bandwidth than I would if I downloaded your 2 kilobyte text file.A direct link. Give me a direct link. Send me an email. Magic-wormhole it. Whatever.Just be aware of the cost to the alternatives.The fonts loaded by Google Docs alone could carry books and books worth of text. The javascript they push on end users itself is freaking massive.Stop being sheep, use notepad./Yells at clouds/rant
       
 (DIR) Post #Au3CCjykrnI8WkPY1Y by phil@fed.bajsicki.com
       2025-05-13T10:59:55.252Z
       
       2 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @kaia@brotka.st Jesus is the Factorio engineer?
       
 (DIR) Post #AuE563kcGgu9Wr1fO4 by phil@fed.bajsicki.com
       2025-05-18T18:02:18.997Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @kaia@brotka.st The problem isn't the article. The problem is 'scientists' not taking the time to understand the subject matter before designing a study.
       
 (DIR) Post #AuW6RagRsmDIeFqT0y by phil@fed.bajsicki.com
       2025-05-27T10:43:01.672Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @kaia@brotka.st Depends. I'd say it's cheap, but a bad deal if you're not using it for business. My job bought their current domain for over 7 figures, so my perception is severely warped.
       
 (DIR) Post #AwbN8wccO6TA2EUuEC by phil@fed.bajsicki.com
       2025-07-28T19:26:33.849Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @kaia@brotka.st @schappi@brotka.st Is there an English version of this? I'm intrigued.
       
 (DIR) Post #AyAf0rGmy3mpGymuTQ by phil@fed.bajsicki.com
       2025-09-13T17:54:45.880Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @kaia@brotka.st I have wanted one like that for ages, but they're so dang pricy.
       
 (DIR) Post #Aynmjzsf1hPTV2tIxc by phil@fed.bajsicki.com
       2025-10-02T14:42:04.446Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       Did you know that there are people who think in words? Terrifying.
       
 (DIR) Post #AyqaxPcE2X9b6ViJLE by phil@fed.bajsicki.com
       2025-09-28T18:51:05.521Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @pojntfx@mastodon.social Doesn't this mean that every single business that's using CloudFlare is likely in breach of GDPR? Am I misreading something?
       
 (DIR) Post #AyrgEXfq1ha1wqLp2W by phil@fed.bajsicki.com
       2025-10-04T11:56:36.405Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @wolf480pl@mstdn.io @pojntfx@mastodon.social Article 13 and 14. Passing data off to a third party requires that the data subject be explicitly notified about where the data is going, for what purpose, what the legal basis for the processing is, how long it's stored, how it's protected, etc.Also it's a transfer outside of the EU, which necessitates additional scrutiny and reporting (Transfer Impact Assessment).Article 7 requires that requests for consent must be presented in a way that's clearly different from other matters - this means that putting your GDPR language in a ToS or Privacy Policy where it's not likely to be read isn't sufficient.CloudFlare and its customers, if they don't notify affected individuals, are very clearly in breach of GDPR, if Cloudflare really is tapping into their customers traffic. However, even if CF isn't tapping into their customer's traffic, they're still in breach of GDPR. As a US company, Cloudflare is subject to FISA 702 and the CLOUD Act, which give the US government power to secretly request access to data about any CF customer.Not to mention, being part of the Data Privacy Framework doesn't absolve US companies from ensuring compliance with GDPR. DPF only means that transfers to certain companies don't require a transfer impact assessment - it doesn't reduce any other obligations.
       
 (DIR) Post #AysWBJEeRmwrupPkJ6 by phil@fed.bajsicki.com
       2025-10-04T21:41:42.398Z
       
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       @wolf480pl@mstdn.io @pojntfx@mastodon.social Yeah, of course. That's why I don't use US-based services if I can avoid it. The American government has been very clear that it's hostile to both their own citizens, and even more hostile to foreigners.