No.
But if trump wins, muskrat can draw up new contracts himself.
No.
But if trump wins, muskrat can draw up new contracts himself.
Then it does nothing.
russia wasn’t even ready for war when they invaded Ukraine.
It sources (includes) any file found in ~/.bashrc.d/ so check that directory.
GOP and their cult members will look at the thumbnail and agree with a smirk that the legislation works as intended.
Sounds like spam to me.
OK. That seems really dark.
Have they tried asking for weapons that could reach Gaza?
“Who knows, maybe you’ve had some of my cooking, donald”
I’m not sure exactly why, but I think that could break him.
As far as I can tell, it’s fraud and has nothing to do with copyright.
Sadly, I can not explain this to you any better.
DNS leaks normally occurs when your OS decides to use the wrong interface for DNS queries. It’s not magic, sorry.
There is a decent explanation here: https://www.top10vpn.com/what-is-a-vpn/vpn-leaks/
By doing a traceroute to the DNS IPs, you only confirm that traceroute goes through the VPN interface, not your DNS resolution.
Smoking. First nicotine and then weed.
Currently working on my addiction to junkfood, sugar and general overeating.
Still highly addicted to caffeine and possibly in denial about a sex addiction. But I think I’ll keep those two.
Traceroute won’t show if you leak DNS requests outside of your VPN. (Unless you coincidentally also leak traffic, but then you’re pretty much just not using your VPN).
To confirm you’ll need to analyze your traffic-flow using a tool like tcpdump or Wireshark and check the source and destination for DNS traffic. If you see incoming DNS responses on an interface that is not your VPN-adaptor or maybe a loopback interface then you’re probably not tunnelling DNS through the VPN.
To answer the question in the headline: Regular DNS is unencrypted and quite easy to snoop on, so any node on the route between you and the DNS server will be able to read it if not using a VPN (i.e. DNS leak). Not sure what you mean by adversary, but it’s not like anyone on the internet can see your traffic. The DNS server may log your request and if you’re not on VPN, your IP address may be logged too.
Straight to Valhalla.
You’re right ofcourse.
Check that you actually have persistent storage enabled. (See man journald.conf
and search for Storage
)
Read up on the numerous parameters to journalctl. (man journalctl
)
journalctl --boot -2
will show logs from previous boot.
journalctl --since "-2 weeks" --unit=sshd
last two weeks worth of sshd logs.
Doesn’t he have pets with psychic powers? Why didn’t they bark anything?