Probably best to avoid systems with known deniable encryption methods, and keep your dummy data there. Then hide your secrets e.g. in deleted space on a drive, in the cloud, or a well-hidden micro-sd card. All have risks, maybe it’s best of all to not keep your secrets with you, and make sure they can’t be associated with you.
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As referred in other comment, the counter counter is to just keep beating to get further keys/hidden data.
There are some cases involving plausible deniability where game theory tells you should beat the person until dead even if they give up their keys, since there might be more.
018118055@sopuli.xyzto Programmer Humor@programming.dev•The simplest mistakes happen to the best of us11·1 year agodeleted by creator
I’ve already seen reimplementation of 2 digit dates here and there.
Because of months of preparation. I know, I was doing it.
2100 not a leap year (divisible by 100). 2400 is a leap year (divisible by 400). Developing for dates is a minefield.
2100 and 2400 will be a shitshow
Being in EU and with Gandi bought out and increasing prices, I recently moved to Hetzner as a domain registrar.
018118055@sopuli.xyzto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Another good reason not to open port 22English2·2 years agoOh, something new to try, thanks
018118055@sopuli.xyzto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Another good reason not to open port 22English2·2 years agoMine is quick enough to run remote desktop over
018118055@sopuli.xyzto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Another good reason not to open port 22English231·2 years agoI’d favour own VPN instead of relying on an additional third party
018118055@sopuli.xyzto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Do any of you bother writing abuse emails?English3·2 years agoI did it in a security incident last year. It took down attacker command and control infrastructure, hindering their operations not just against my company but half a dozen others which had made the news. I found out later about the others on Twitter. After that I became much more positive about the worth of abuse reports.
018118055@sopuli.xyzto Technology@beehaw.org•Smart-homes: The future, or harmful?English1·2 years agoUsing home assistant since 2017. As you add stuff there’s more synergy, like a network effect. I have automations and services that:
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Adjust the bathroom floor thermostat according to the prevailing hourly energy price
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Adjust the colour temperature of lighting during the day so blue light is reduced in the evening, allowing natural melatonin production to function
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Announce on a local speaker when our child gets to school in the morning using their phone location
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Operates festive lighting in the winter with reference to sunset and sunrise
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Turns off all lights when leaving; or sometimes if I’m feeling more paranoid
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Replays lighting patterns from a previous week to simulate* occupation
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Sends me an alert if motion is detected and nobody’s home
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Turns off the picture on the TV if nobody’s in front of it for a while using a 60GHz radar sensor
as well as a few other things. I don’t want a smart home that’s just remote operation with a phone. I want to use capabilities to automate things so I don’t need to be concerned about them.
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Literally mythical man month