[[ Moved to @vi@cybre.space ]] a changé de compte pour @vi@cybre.space :
E0497806cdf4cdb3

[[ Moved to @vi@cybre.space ]] @vi@witches.town

Mastodon feature request for people like me who have a visual memory: have a notification when one of the people you interact with changes of avatar

@luluberlu but if you don't get my jokes I can't expect mere mortals to understand them

@luluberlu you keep not getting my jokes, I'm starting to think I'm not actually funny 😢

@luluberlu and I expect NZ cats slither down stairs just as well as any other cats

@luluberlu no no, I mean I don't know the answer, because duolingo gave me the words already in the order they're supposed to go in

@luluberlu
$ make friends
make: don't know how to make friends

@yaymukund I don't know 😓 but the thing I'm fighting with right now isn't the first time I've seen it

if your makefile's `clean' target depends on the `build' or `all' targets we're not friends any more

@tobascodagama I mostly like them too, but ugh have they made some weird decisions

@tobascodagama the drama that would cause would be spectacular to watch

Let's Encrypt will start doing wildcard certs in 2018. It truly is the future.

the craziest thing about KARL is that their rebuilding randomizes execution flow in the binary, so you can't build traditional exploits against openbsd that rely on a particular code path being executed

"Developed by Theo de Raadt, KARL will work by generating a new kernel binary at install, upgrade, and boot time. If the user boots up, upgrades, or reboots his machine, the most recently generated kernel will replace the existing kernel binary, and the OS will generate a new kernel binary that will be used on the next boot/upgrade/reboot, constantly rotating kernels on reboots or upgrades."

what in the HECK openbsd's KARL system is insane

@luluberlu and yes, dear/deer, but no one ever said google translate was good