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To facilitate client to client communications, they should add a who-does-it-serve (short WHO DIS) system to get contact information of already reserved names.

Not that a Meta product is a perfect solution either



Ha!


Is this just me or does Firefox become completely unusable when opening the homepage platform.uno?


Works almost perfectly fine for me with Windows 11 + Firefox 125.0.2 (64-bit), besides the top menu item icons not rendering. Reason for the icon rendering issues seems to be ill-configured cross-resource sharing, so should be the same for everyone else with a properly configured browser.


Using Firefox (Developer edition here, the blue one), and I don't see any issue.


What certainly comes to mind is the recent leak of the Github SSH Host key where such a mishap opens the possibility of MITM attacks if no appropriate actions are taken.

Practical examples of common sense could be pipelines in gitlab where a ssh connection is started. In such situations, the easiest solution is to just ignore the fingerprint but of course if the gitlab server network environment is compromised, a MITM attack is very possible.


Upon launch, I was of course disappointed with the state of the server and the online only nature of it. But the larger problem for why this game was a failure was the simple problem of way to little space to build a city. The whole concept of a few 1km x 1km city patches in a shared world to build in was flawed from the start. I want to build gigantic cities with elaborate public infrastructure and rivers full of sewage. Cities: Skylines simply was a much better fit for what makes the city building genre appealing.

I find it a bit shortsighted to center the blame for a boring game on its launch date debacle. Many other games with similar problems at launch became hits.


Seems like OP just performed a stress test on his website as he is the "Webmaster of https://hvac-learning.com an HVAC elearning website"[1]. Hopefully you can figure out something! Thank you for educating about such technology!

[1] from WatchdogReset's profile about


I am sorry for the inconvenience. I am still learning how to build a nice and efficient website. I will analyze what happened and try to fix and enhance !


I love that you're building free educational resources, especially about something like this! If you need help/advice to help build your website, email me (see my profile), I'll be delighted to help pro bono. :)


The specific emails that were marked for me were also reminders about a subscription. Interesting!


Maybe all these new AI aren't that smart after all. I just checked and in my case the email was coming from domains-noreply@google.com so you'd think that Gmail is smart enough to not flag as spam an email from google.com and yet...


Must be a common phishing scam.

"Your domain is about to expire, enter your Google username and password to renew it!"

If it was me, I'd pattern those emails to be exactly like the real ones. So then the real ones might get flagged by the spam filters too. You'd think they'd check who's sending them though (origin server)...


Don't Android phones have a similar feature with a linked Google Account? I once needed to contact the old Owner of an Samsung phone because of such an account lock.



You would, in theory, just need to remember your one strong password, like with a password manager (except 2fa and such). The benefit is that you don't need to store anything, just remember your master password and the "salts" are obvious to you, but an attacker with the clear text password would not be able to differentiate a random password to a pashword result. From the generation time and cpu usage on pashword I'd also guess bruteforce is very hard even if you would know it's generated.


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