Imagine, if we were just all on the same time. It’d just make things, a little easier.
Imagine, if we were just all on the same time. It’d just make things, a little easier.
“Gabe boy” color scheme lol
I hate this lmao
The web isn’t open because we have to pay to access it.
I took a music business class and I vaguely remember this subject. I’m pretty sure dude was actually in the hole from frivolous spending, and also partially due to the way the music rights worked out.
I dont think free speech is free when you are the richest man in the world. If you dont like the weight on your shoulders give away your wealth.
Literally my thought process. Though the alternative I guess is you just don’t get a cert? Maybe the web page is automatically rejected? Both those suck too lol
So no newer announcers can do this? No room for new humans to take the reigns? Just the same voice generated for eternity?
Well I personally think thats one of the smoothest keyboards I have ever seen. Its giving me the same feeling a really smooth rock does when you hold it or look at it.
The ancient monitor in the background is what adds this vibe of mystery to it, makes your brain question the image a little. But it also completes the image.
The energy this post has is truly mystifying.
According to nathanaldensr on an ATT forum:
So much terrible advice in this thread, including by AT&T. I’m a software developer, including web development, of 20+ years who is used to seeing these kinds of things. Hopefully I can help educate the folks on this thread.
TL;DR: There is nothing wrong with your equipment or its settings. Your internet connection is down and your modem is hijacking outgoing HTTPS connections. Once your internet connection comes back, the modem will no longer perform this behavior.
In-depth answer:
Various apps like browsers and Zoom use a protocol known as HTTPS. This protocol requires that your client device (PC, phone, etc.) and the remote server negotiate a secure, encrypted connection. Part of this negotiation is the server presenting the app with a certificate. The certificate will be issued for the domain name your computer is trying to access. For example, when your internet connection is working, connecting a browser to https://att.com will result in the server presenting a certificate for att.com, which is both trusted by a so-called “trusted certificate authority” and is also issued for att.com. Because the certificate is trusted and its domain name matches the domain name you are attempting to connect to, the browser allows the connection.
Your problem arose because the AT&T modem, often a brand like Arris, detects that there is no internet connection and intercepts these outgoing HTTPS connection attempts. Instead of not responding at all, which I argue is the more secure option, the Arris modem responds with a so-called “self-signed” certificate–named this way because the certificate was not issued by a trusted certificate authority like the real https://att.com certificate. Not only is the certificate not trusted, but it’s also issued for the domain name dsldevice.domain_not_set.invalid, which, of course, doesn’t match the domain name your client device is attempting to connect to. This results in scary warnings, popups, etc. These warnings differ from app to app, but they almost always prevent any further activity on the connection. This is for security reasons because sometimes malicious actors can man-in-the-middle a connection attempt between your client device and a server and attempt to provide a fake certificate. Most modern apps are programmed to handle these mismatches and prevent you from continuing to use the connection.
For example, here is Zoom’s warning window that shows the self-signed certificate, its domain name (called a common name in certificate parlance), and who it was issued by. You can see the issuer is Arris, who is the manufacturer of my modem. Ignore the “The certificate is valid” with a green checkmark; the certificate is “valid” in the sense that it is well-formed, but it is invalid in the sense that it was not signed by a trusted certificate authority and is issued for a mismatched domain name (Zoom really should not report self-signed certificates as “valid.”)
Insightful, kinda a dick about it tho. But yeah some message interception from your router or provider seems to be it.
I dont have this experience myself. I just saw your post and browsed some forums. So be cautious. But the issue isn’t contained to any single device, platform, or provider it seems. So these explanations seem valid.
Fuck Bluesky for breaking interoperability before it even started. There was no reason to not use the open source protocol.
Even in death, I still serve democracy.
“I have my configs on github. I can just pull them down and be done.”
I fucken learned that day.
Its a fucken shame Israel is giving credence to the “Jyoos control everything” conspiracy. Look at this fucken reach Isreal has in America. But Israel isn’t the Jewish People. No matter how bad they want us to think that.
Its me, I wanted to take my arch install from my laptop because the rice is sexy. It was a bad idea.
Think I’m gonna try to replace my gaming desktop again. Its the last machine of mine still on Windows. I just hurt myself years ago by buying a 2080 TI
I’m gonna be real. I dont think home directory files should handled by something named tmpfiles. I think something named tmpfiles should only handled volatile data as it is colloquially known. I get there’s a lot that can be considered that in home directories. But user data should be handled by something that is made for that and users inherently know by the name that this will mess your home directory. This only applies to monoliths and monoliths to be like systemd. Maybe you’re doing too much with a single program if your naming becomes problematic.
Most beginner friendly Linux distros have installers. You just need Rufus and a guide to making a bootable USB (its like 5 steps)
Just let go of all meaning. 2 PM can be in the middle of the night if you just let go.