

Oh little snitch was just what I used when macOS was my main operating system. When I switched to windows I started using simple wall and I just recently was poking around for a Linux solution and I found open snitch
Oh little snitch was just what I used when macOS was my main operating system. When I switched to windows I started using simple wall and I just recently was poking around for a Linux solution and I found open snitch
Just use little snitch, open snitch or simple wall depending on your operating system and block the outbound connection if one ever occurs
Well that was certainly something lol
PSA: Don’t let your cats play with yarn. I knew a cat that ate a bunch of yarn and it got all tangled up in the intestines and the cat had to be euthanized
Flicking my orb
It works as long as you can get at the authentication key that generates the one time codes. Usually you scan a QR code, but sometimes you have to paste it in as a string.
How you get that private authentication key can vary by service. For example, you can install steam mobile on an android emulator and use an open source program to extract the private authentication key.
Instead of opening Google authenticator or Authy or whatever your preferred 2FA is, you can take photos of the QR codes in Bitwarden mobile to store the TOTP codes in it, and then Bitwarden puts them on your clipboard to paste into websites
Tell them some password managers have TOTP support. I think I paid Bitwarden $10 for life or per year for TOTP so I don’t need to use my phone.
The McDonald’s glass scandal
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i2F2i59XcE0