RustyWizard

joined 1 year ago
[–] RustyWizard@programming.dev 2 points 1 week ago

What’s preventing that from working now? If it’s indeterminate latency, then yeah, absolutely. Theoretically this will give you the ability to have a very deterministic loop around the accelerometer data, but 3d printers don’t move all that fast to begin with so having unbounded latency might not matter. The determinism we’re talking about here is on the order of tens of microseconds or less.

[–] RustyWizard@programming.dev 24 points 1 month ago

It’s a bad meme. Nothing wrong with the topic or fighting against sexism in academia, but the context of the picture is literally the opposite of the message.

[–] RustyWizard@programming.dev 5 points 3 months ago (3 children)

June, moon, and dune don’t all rhyme to you?

[–] RustyWizard@programming.dev 36 points 3 months ago (4 children)

Copyright terms are so fucking stupid. Imagine getting into trouble for using Popeye. Make it the same as a patent duration and be done with it.

[–] RustyWizard@programming.dev 8 points 3 months ago (1 children)

Something something broken clock. Absolutely fuck Ken Paxton, but this is the right thing to do.

[–] RustyWizard@programming.dev 30 points 6 months ago

Pff, imagine living a life where you try to delay your death.

[–] RustyWizard@programming.dev 9 points 7 months ago (1 children)

The court didn’t answer the question of whether or not Trump engaged in insurrection. The question is whether or not a state can kick candidates off the ballet under section 3 of the 14th amendment and the court found that they could not.

[–] RustyWizard@programming.dev 10 points 1 year ago

Wait until they make Peter files

[–] RustyWizard@programming.dev 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

The question was about privacy. Routing your DNS traffic through a VPN puts your unencrypted traffic out of an endpoint with all sorts of other connections. That's a privacy gain.

Further, using DNS-over-TLS or DNS-over-Https encrypts your query end-to-end.

Using both in concert prevents the DNS servers from knowing your IP and anyone along the route from knowing your query.

[–] RustyWizard@programming.dev 4 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (6 children)

Kinda. You can always route your traffic over a VPN. Further, from the unbound page:

To help increase online privacy, Unbound supports DNS-over-TLS and DNS-over-HTTPS which allows clients to encrypt their communication. In addition, it supports various modern standards that limit the amount of data exchanged with authoritative servers. These standards do not only improve privacy but also help making the DNS more robust. The most important are Query Name Minimisation, the Aggressive Use of DNSSEC-Validated Cache and support for authority zones, which can be used to load a copy of the root zone.

Edit: to be clear, I run unbound but I don't recall how much I hardened it. The config file is fairly large and I was mostly focusing on speed and efficiency since it's running on an already busy raspberry pi.

[–] RustyWizard@programming.dev 12 points 1 year ago (9 children)

Authoritative name servers.

Good enough write-up about it here: https://docs.pi-hole.net/guides/dns/unbound/

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