@veit Interesting. commit.cleanup = scissors is new to me. What's your exact use case for this? Is it so you're able to mention "#123" issue IDs in the beginning of a line?
Exhibit #124 of 126 of my great big graphics project is slow going due to substantial physical damage of the sole known intact original data.
Still working on that psychologically affirming one quarter done milestone three days in.
I've got errands and such today so won't be able to put in any hours until after dark.
In the meanwhile, exhibits #001 to #123 are presently available online: accessible, indexed and searchable - with content removed from the official copies - free, only here.
Uhmm. Are you aware that Israel is #4 on the World Happiness Index this year? It’s the happiest non-scandinavic country in the world. You don’t get there by being “enemy of the people”.
This won’t get aid to the people as it will keep being stolen, won’t remove hamas from power so another attack will start it all over again, and I doubt many of the hostages are still even alive. It does nothing for the humanitarian side and just draws out the suffering.
Fuck the name on the piece of land - Palestine, Israel, US puppet, UN DMZ #123 - Hamas needs to go so aid can get to the right people.
Basically what the title says - Can my ISP see the exit node of my VPN ? I hope not, because that would be weird, and would defeat the whole purpose of a VPN....
I assume this “VPN Server” that they can see is the “entry node”, and not the “exit node” (i.e. my IP as seen by the world) - but never got a clear answer to that
Traditionally, the entry node and the exit node have been the same VPN server/ip. In that sense, your ISP does know the IP of your exit server, since they are the ones connecting you to it.
For example, your X ISP’s logs could show “At 15:00, user #123 connects to IP 1.2.3.4, which lookup shows is assigned to “CheapVPNs Ltd”. At 15:01 our email server received 1,000,000 emails from IP 1.2.3.4 all angrily complaining about how “X ISP sucks”. Correlation implies user #123 is responsible for the mail bomb attack against our servers.”
At the moment, Mullvad specifically does use different entry and exit IPs, but they are all still located in the same datacenter and subnet. That is, you could be connecting to a Mullvad VPN server 1.2.3.4, 1.2.3.5, or 1.2.3.6 in London, and they all exit out through 1.2.3.1 in London. This is just something Mullvad does. Other VPN services may not do it and Mullvad hasn’t done it in the past. Someone analyzing ISP logs could correlate these IPs if they really wanted to.
Mullvad also offers “multihop”, but the way they have it implemented currently (changing the destination port number), an ISP could still deduce your exit IP if they bother looking up records of Mullvad network structure (which are publicly available), since they know the IP number and the port number of your entrance node.
The only way to hide your VPN exit IP from your ISP currently is to use multiple VPN services and nest them inside each other (or use one service and nest it inside itself using the “multiple devices” perk). Then only a state-level actor could hope to correlate your traffic by monitoring the ingress/outflow of multiple IPs simultaneously.
Nice pair of Linear Perturbations by bravokiloecho (Ben Elwyn)! I love how these two mints differ from each other, but still show their common roots (cold/warm tones, blurred/precise lines).
Short for "Mental Altered Panorama". The images implicitly call for interpretation; some may see futuristic cities in them, others a network of mountain paths or peaceful archipelagos.
Hamas official says group aims to repeat Oct. 7 onslaught many times to destroy Israel (www.timesofisrael.com)
UN approves Gaza truce [video] (bee-tube.fr)
Can my ISP see the exit node of my VPN ?
Basically what the title says - Can my ISP see the exit node of my VPN ? I hope not, because that would be weird, and would defeat the whole purpose of a VPN....
Connections #123 Thursday 12 October 2023
Link to Connections: www.nytimes.com/games/connections...
We don't talk about #3671. (lemmy.world)
Only the OGs will remember when Steam would sometimes rm -rf /* your system. github.com/ValveSoftware/steam-for-linux/…/3671...