

Note: BTRFS defrag will result in a different copy at the end of the day. If you’re using snapshots this will lead to increased utilization.


Note: BTRFS defrag will result in a different copy at the end of the day. If you’re using snapshots this will lead to increased utilization.


Looks like Cyberpunk 2077


There’s still valid concern about this being a foot in the door tactic. Once an OS complies with this request what will the next one be? Why should this even be allowed?
Either way though, the reddit citation is a bit unnerving.


Out of curiosity, how?
< urls.txt while read -r url; ...
Is a syntax error.
while read -r url < urls.txt; ...
Result in an infinite loop.


I’m uninformed about this, but do KYC laws come into effect at some profit point or are they globally enforced. I don’t see how any small businesses could possibly afford a 3rd party audit, or how that would even scale. I agree it’s necessary, but logistically it seems problematic.


You can also avoid cat since you aren’t actually concatenating files (depending on file size this can be much faster):
while read -r url; do echo "download $url"; done < urls.txt


Legit thought it was just going to be a wall of text editors and nothing else


Well, that’s the last excuse I needed. Time to finally buy Witchfire.


Ironically, my first instinct to opening that page and seeing it’s unusual layout and density on mobile was to switch to the reader view. Immediately getting hit with the cyphertext output. Cool, I guess.
I suppose I could have phrased that better. The registers themselves correspond to particular applications/stages, but the values store in those registers should change based on how the application/stage was loaded. Switch the order or inject a new binary and the hash from that stage on should change.
Any changes in the boot process should change various PCR registers. https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Trusted_Platform_Module#Accessing_PCR_registers
Eh, that may just promote a lot of “What are your opinions about x” posts where the first comment is the ad. Suppose it’s an open call to list alternatives though.