

![dastanktal [he/him]](https://hexbear.net/pictrs/image/8accc7b2-f687-4935-bb67-8e4adc30ad5f.jpeg?format=webp&thumbnail=128)
Baby Marxist. Under deprogramming
Blog: https://dastanktal.planam.link/
I like to argue as a way to learn. I won't use fallicous argument techniques if you won't. I will still try and be polite though. Will probably keep commenting as long as people respond.

Pinebook?

This is really well executed, too bad he didn't know enough to protect his identity.
Still, so much for that reduced cost of labor.
If more people reacted like this companies wouldn't be so fast to lay people off

Dumb script kiddies probably judr wking life difficult for everyone for shits and giggles

"The court has sympathy, of course, with the family and the blow it has delivered to them.
"But the applicant knew that he was his mother's carer, and now charged... this is something he has to bear in mind as his responsibility and the fact that the alleged victim broke previous bail conditions."
Such unempathetic churlish behaviour. Like this person planned on his mother's condition worsening.
Dude is an activist participating in non-violent forms of protest.
It does no good keeping people like this locked up nor does it benefit society.

Ubiquiti, tp link, microtek
Get something for small businesses.

AirVPN also really good. Plus they have static port forwarding. And very easy flipping of OpenVPN to wireguard

A lot of the time these apps will have heuristics that will reach back out and so you will see network connections occasionally.
Without knowing more about this application, I don't have the right context to evaluate whether or not I would trust something like that, so it's gonna be up to your comfort level. But, if clamav came back clean and so did your other virus software, I would assume it's not malicious traffic.

It's not like traditional antivirus software, it just includes a tool that you can use to manually scan files to see if it has a virus signature, which is all Eset and most virus scanners are doing on the backend. They're also doing what's called heuristics, which is where they're using predictive modeling to try and identify if a program has what they call an attack signature. This does result in false positives, just so you're aware.
All virus total is doing is running a bunch of virus engines like eset and clamav on the back end to see if it triggers anything.
If both your virus software and clamav comes back clean, then I'd trust it.

Yes, it's open source antivirus software.
The entire internet practically runs on what these guys do.
It has a tool that you can use to scan whatever binary you want and it'll tell you whether or not it's a virus which fits what you need to do

Just run the file against clamav, and you should be able to tell whether or not it's got issues. That's generally what's done in commercial spaces.

Fucking butchers

Life finds a way