





The usual problems with parsing ls don’t happen here because Nu’s ls builtin returns properly typed data.
Isn’t that the point that the previous commenter was making by linking that answer? I read their comment as “here is why you should use Nu shell instead of parsing ls output.”


Does youtube not know how to count unique viewers like every other web analytics platform does?
Sorry to be a doofus, but could you paste the output of iptables-save and ip6tables-save instead? The default iptables output actually just leaves out important information like which interface the rule applies to.
I think the best thing to do would be to see if you can get support from Windscribe and find out whether it’s a known issue or a bug that needs fixing.
Thanks, looking at it now, but I should have remembered, iptables has a separate tool for ipv6 called ip6tables. Could you also paste the output of
ip6tables -L
If you put it in the comment between backticks like this:
```
<paste here>
```
then it will keep the formatting exactly as it was when you copied it, instead of munging the linebreaks.
Check your cron and systemd timers to see if a regular scheduled job is running at that time.
It might help if you paste a complete dump of your firewall rules. I’m not sure if ufw uses iptables of netfilter since I haven’t used it before, but you can do:
for iptables firewalls:
iptables -L
for netfilter firewalls:
nft list ruleset
That might help debug exactly what ufw and your vpn are doing.


Write to your representatives.


First paragraph after the introduction:
what is a “modern terminal experience”? Here are a few things that are important to me, with which part of the system is responsible for them:
- multiline support for copy and paste: if you paste 3 commands in your shell, it should not immediately run them all! That’s scary! (shell, terminal emulator)
- infinite shell history: if I run a command in my shell, it should be saved forever, not deleted after 500 history entries or whatever. Also I want commands to be saved to the history immediately when I run them, not only when I exit the shell session (shell)
- a useful prompt: I can’t live without having my current directory and current git branch in my prompt (shell)
- 24-bit colour: this is important to me because I find it MUCH easier to theme neovim with 24-bit colour support than in a terminal with only 256 colours (terminal emulator)
- clipboard integration between vim and my operating system so that when I copy in Firefox, I can just press p in vim to paste (text editor, maybe the OS/terminal emulator too)
- good autocomplete: for example commands like git should have command-specific autocomplete (shell)
- having colours in ls (shell config)
- a terminal theme I like: I spend a lot of time in my terminal, I want it to look nice and I want its theme to match my terminal editor’s theme. (terminal emulator, text editor)
- automatic terminal fixing: If a programs prints out some weird escape codes that mess up my terminal, I want that to automatically get reset so that my terminal doesn’t get messed up (shell)
- keybindings: I want Ctrl+left arrow to work (shell or application) being able to use the scroll wheel in programs like less: (terminal emulator and applications)
There are a million other terminal conveniences out there and different people value different things, but those are the ones that I would be really unhappy without.
So basically it’s the features that have been standard in shells and terminal emulators for the past couple of decades.


What does this mean?


please share


You’re welcome. I’ve been using Linux for 26 years and had never heard of (or at least didn’t remember hearing of) MPD, so it’s not just new users. We all feel a different part of the elephant.


What is MPD?
MPD (Music Player Daemon) is a server-client audio player long popular with Linux users. The headless daemon runs as a background service, typically on a remote audio server. Music is then accessed via a GUI client frontend, which connects to the MPD server to stream content.
Kind of like running your bespoke, curated music streaming service, in a sense.
They found a way to inject text into a google email notification (by setting the name of their google workspace account to the phishing message), and then set up a mail forwarding service to redirect the notification to the victim accounts. That way the victims receive a legit email from google but the text of the email is attacker-controlled and can point the victim to their phishing site.
It’s not really a vulnerability in DKIM. The bug is in google’s use of attacker-controlled text fields in their notification emails.


I can’t find any videos with examples of the kinds of effects that this software can produce. They have a youtube channel but it has no content.


If you don’t use an ad-blocker then advertisers on every site that you visit can connect your identity to your use of that website.
How did you bypass the password?