Try removing all the superfluous default routes.
Argon2id (cryptsetup default) and Argon2i PBKDFs are not supported (GRUB bug #59409), only PBKDF2 is.
There is this patch, although I have not tested it myself. There is always cryptsetup luksAddKey --pbkdf pbkdf2
.
This seems right and exactly the way I’ve set it up. On subvolid=5 I have subvolumes and
@home
, in /etc/fstab
I mount /
as subvol=@
, and /home
as subvol=@home
.
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/10602504/how-does-user-js-work-in-firefox-in-detail:
It just looks like a JavaScript file. Once upon a time in Netscape 3 and maybe 4 it actually was, but now it’s just a file with a .js extension and a very restricted syntax that’s parsed by a separate (non-JS) parser and not executed in any way.
Could you run sudo lshw -C network
and post the output for the wireless interface?
We have those on I2P already, see tracker2.postman.i2p for example.
You should not torrent over the tor network, but you can torrent over the I2P network. qBittorrent even has experimental I2P support built in.
I occasionally experience the same thing. When this happens, it appears the jwt token is not sent with the initial request (thus appearing to be logged out), but it is sent with api requests on the same page (unread_count
, list
, etc.), so the cookie is not lost (document.cookie
also shows it). Sometimes refreshing again fixes it, but I haven’t yet found a good workaround. I’ll experiment a bit next time it happens.
But you can do this.
Indeed. This works because direct connections to the tor network are easily censored, but WebRTC is not (not without a lot of collateral damage at least).
The snowflake proxy acts as a bridge to the tor network at the entry side. If by repercussions you mean risk of exit-node traffic, there are none. It might cost a little bit of bandwidth.
Memory safety would be the main advantage.
Yes, for example, syncing on a kernel panic could lead to data corruption (which is why we don’t do that). For the same reason REISUB is not recommended anymore: The default advice for a locked-up system should be SysRq B.