It takes a while to kick habits, the feeling of "who the fuck will ever see this comment" keeps stopping me from posting half the time. At least on Lemmy there's plenty of chance someone will.
OmanMkII
Shit that's a lot, here's to them finally getting closer to banning that shit!
Some crazy hail for me, was a good 10 minutes of hammering before a torrent of water
The short answer for this is that an employer probably doesn't give a shit about you watching youtube at work, but what they (by they, their IT/security teams) do care about is your account logging in from a new geolocation, or clicking a risky link in an unusual email. If the employer logs everything that occurs (which is required by a lot of areas such as PCI DSS for electronic payment) they can track who's account was compromised, how it happened, exactly what was done by the actor, and how far it's spread across the network - if at all. If no logs are kept, then it may as well have never happened.
ETA: there's a large difference between mouse tracking mentioned by the article and logging though, the former is rather unethical and I'd hope that it's never used in the name of security, I sure can't think of a use.
The public part of it would be the RSA pubkey, likely linked with an identifier such as the SHA-256 hash of the email. You could quite easily have that ledger public and it would take millennia to crack any of the emails, much easier to use fuzzing with common words and names than trying wasting computing power for a single email. The whole point of blockchain is that it's an immutable public ledger which would actually suit this idea quite well.
Plus we have to be vocal about the dangerous levels of DHMO in our water supply, excessive consumption can be fatal
Yeah it is, most rooms are 200+ in the inner suburbs, 3 bedrooms are easily 6-800/wk. I was somewhat depressed by the number of people bombarding me with offers when we had a spare room to fill.
The key to good conversation is finding something interesting in what they say and delving into it. Why did they go there? What did they like about it? Where are they going next?
The key to boring conversation is the opposite, short answers with no room to navigate. Oh, I guess. Thats nice. Not much really.