GSV_Sleeper_Service

joined 8 months ago
[–] GSV_Sleeper_Service@lemmy.world 1 points 1 day ago (2 children)

Calling someone a fascist for that is obviously a bit OTT but you've ignored the "do weird shit" part of the response so it wasn't literally what you said. Taking the full response into account you can easily interpret it as "I don't bother with mental maths but use a calculator instead, anyone who isn't like me is weird as shit"

That is a bit thought police-y

I use them as well, never had any issues.

They have a useful API I leverage to manage DNS entries with scripts and cron jobs which is probably fairly standard these days but seemed to be a little harder to find when I first moved to them.

[–] GSV_Sleeper_Service@lemmy.world 6 points 6 months ago (1 children)

You think linux doesn't have a firewall? I'm fairly certain every distribution has one installed and enabled by default.

The real reason linux worked so well in this situation was the local admin rights that came from being a rogue, unmanaged device on the network. I'm sure they could have made windows work if all the group policies weren't being enforced.

Even if you wrote the code yourself you can come back to it a while later and have a wtf moment ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

[–] GSV_Sleeper_Service@lemmy.world 4 points 8 months ago (1 children)

I tried setting this up a few years ago without success. Prompted by your post I took another look and I think I was trying to serve my key from a mishmash of the direct and advanced URIs (although I don't remember there being an advanced and direct method when I first tried this) and I had a TXT record setup in DNS as well for some reason. Might have been following a draft RFC? Whatever I was trying, it didn't work for me then.

No one I know other than a couple of services I have accounts with use pgp so it is of little use to me right now. But I am glad it is now working and I don't need to rely on any 3rd party keyservers. So thanks for the prompt and the write-up.