

They would need to do DPI and drop the packet using its SNI. Websites, especially pirates ones, really need to implement ECH, this would prevent this.


They would need to do DPI and drop the packet using its SNI. Websites, especially pirates ones, really need to implement ECH, this would prevent this.


If you are willing to tell the country I would be curious.


Yes, but I’ve stopped most of it since then. Had some great times, a few not so great, but in the end those were mostly good experiences.
Also alcohol is a drug, and one of the worst one.


Wouldn’t this be solved by using a DNS server your country as no control over?
But anyway PirateBay is not recommended anymore.
Is it really? That’s the same thing as the AI coded compiler. It has multiple OS source code in it’s training data, as someone put it about the Claude C Compiler: “it’s a brute force attempt to decompress fuzzily stored knowledge contained within the network”.


And it’s very handy for this, I have the same config for all my devices (desktop, laptop and server). Enabling and disabling different modules depending on the host it’s deployed to.


That’s why they are asking for a self-hosted solution, not a Google one.


As for your bottom line remember the contributors are working on it for free, they are not selling anything. So they are not running after more users. It’s good as it is, non technical people can use flatpack or AppImage and technical people can add a repo without issues.
And someday someone could add it to the official repo, it could be you.


The only relevant part in that link is this:
Some third-party repositories might appear safe to use as they contain only packages that have no equivalent in Debian. However, there are no guarantees that any repository will not add more packages in future, leading to breakage.
And you should be safe about this.
As I was saying, the devs are not responsible for including the package to the official repo. You are owed nothing and have plenty of other options to install it.


Adding a repo is not “tainting” an install. Adding a package to the official repo is not the responsibility of the devs but of Debian’s package maintainers.


Snowflake is an entrypoint into the tor network, not an exit point. I’m not a lawyer but I don’t think there are any legal implications, or maybe in Russia or Iran. And the whole point is that its traffic is very hard to identify.


Someone made a website with all the corruptions and scandals she is accused of and she is trying to take it down: https://wikidati.fr/


https://yggleak.top/fr/home/ygg-dossier#le-ddos
But even on the home page it lists other alternatives: https://yggleak.top/fr


The 2 other trackers they used to DDoS maybe.


Well deserved, that tracker was such a cash grab.
No, it can’t.


They block with DPI so DoH would not be enough.


You still can push your backups to another provider, it’ll take a bit of time depending on this size but it’s perfectly doable. It’s not easy to have backups in separate locations otherwise.


Another post by Big Broccoli.
From the article: