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poo poo I meant "RealVNC" sorry guys. Thanks for the suggestions though, I need a solution and im sure one of these will be that. edit: I had no idea there were so many things based on VNC, or that it was open source. Very cool 1gnoirents fucked around with this message at 19:00 on Feb 7, 2018 |
# ? Feb 7, 2018 18:58 |
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# ? May 22, 2024 02:24 |
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RealVNC is spying on people's use? Because I use their Viewer to connect to a free server. Not crypto related in any way but now I'm concerned about something I use on my machine to talk to my other machine.
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# ? Feb 7, 2018 19:13 |
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It's based on registrations I think, not outright spying on what you're doing. Probably similar thing for TeamViewer bumping him to a non-private license (5+ installs? Get outta here or pay us)
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# ? Feb 7, 2018 19:40 |
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Why not use Remote Desktop?
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# ? Feb 8, 2018 03:05 |
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Forwarding RDP out to the 'net is a great way to get a whole bunch of Chinese botnets hammering your PC.
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# ? Feb 8, 2018 03:07 |
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Oh I thought he was on a LAN hitting headless boxes
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# ? Feb 8, 2018 03:46 |
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Why not do RDP over SSH?
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# ? Feb 8, 2018 03:48 |
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Kazinsal posted:Forwarding RDP out to the 'net is a great way to get a whole bunch of Chinese botnets hammering your PC. That didn't stop Hillary
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# ? Feb 8, 2018 04:21 |
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Alpha Mayo posted:That didn't stop Hillary But what about SMBenghazi
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# ? Feb 8, 2018 04:33 |
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Kazinsal posted:Forwarding RDP out to the 'net is a great way to get a whole bunch of Chinese botnets hammering your PC. i've been RDPing into my home computer from work over the default port for the past 3 years. No chinese botnets yet.
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# ? Feb 8, 2018 20:23 |
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Holyshoot posted:i've been RDPing into my home computer from work over the default port for the past 3 years. No chinese botnets yet.
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# ? Feb 8, 2018 20:36 |
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Holyshoot posted:i've been RDPing into my home computer from work over the default port for the past 3 years. No chinese botnets yet. I can guarantee you they've been hitting it. They might not have gotten in but if you turn on credential audit logging (Group policy editor, Computer Configuration/Policies/WindowsSettings/Security Settings/Advanced Audit Policy Configuration/Account Logon/Audit Credential Validation, enable logging failures) and watch the Security section of Event Viewer over the course of a day you'll see some crazy poo poo. At least lock that poo poo down to your office's IP address.
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# ? Feb 8, 2018 20:55 |
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Kazinsal posted:I can guarantee you they've been hitting it. They might not have gotten in but if you turn on credential audit logging (Group policy editor, Computer Configuration/Policies/WindowsSettings/Security Settings/Advanced Audit Policy Configuration/Account Logon/Audit Credential Validation, enable logging failures) and watch the Security section of Event Viewer over the course of a day you'll see some crazy poo poo. is this china? its the only thing to show up since enabling that, my office is fine.
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# ? Feb 8, 2018 21:18 |
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He meant blacklist all IPs, then whitelist only the IPs you're going to connect from. Better still would be to whitelist only your local IP range, then use an SSH tunnel. So you'd SSH into a local machine on your local network from work, THEN open up an RDP session.
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# ? Feb 8, 2018 21:39 |
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I used to use SSH tunnels and RDP to grab assignments I forgot and get around the restrictive filter back in High School. Classic stuff.
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# ? Feb 8, 2018 21:43 |
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Kazinsal posted:I can guarantee you they've been hitting it. literally any computer accessible from the wider internet is undergoing a continuous 24/7 pen test, whether the owner realises or not.
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# ? Feb 8, 2018 22:00 |
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I guess I don't know what ssh is anymore because to me I imagine a terminal window and a command line prompt, which sort of defeats the purpose of a remote desktop.
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# ? Feb 8, 2018 22:01 |
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Craptacular! posted:I guess I don't know what ssh is anymore because to me I imagine a terminal window and a command line prompt, which sort of defeats the purpose of a remote desktop. You can use a terminal like that to establish a SSH connection and then utilize the pipe to open a normal RDP session through it.
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# ? Feb 8, 2018 22:06 |
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Craptacular! posted:I guess I don't know what ssh is anymore because to me I imagine a terminal window and a command line prompt, which sort of defeats the purpose of a remote desktop. SSH can also forward any port locally to any port remotely after you've set up the SSH tunnel.
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# ? Feb 8, 2018 22:16 |
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SSH over 443 or 80 outbound is clutch Also, I'm winding down selling it all. Profits are garbage.
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# ? Feb 8, 2018 22:18 |
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Risky Bisquick posted:Also, I'm winding down selling it all. Profits are garbage. My eBay buyers left me feedback today... never seen anyone so happy to get $600 PNY 1070 blower cards...
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# ? Feb 8, 2018 23:26 |
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Craptacular! posted:I guess I don't know what ssh is anymore because to me I imagine a terminal window and a command line prompt, which sort of defeats the purpose of a remote desktop. Expanding on what the others said, SSH is a generic secure tunnel protocol. It just happens to be most famous for tunneling a terminal session. You can also use it to transfer files (commonly known as SFTP), pass X11 signaling (remotely running a GUI application that displays as a window on your local machine), forwarding a port on your local machine to a port on the remote machine (or any network it can access), forwarding a port on the remote machine to a port on your local machine (or any network it can access), creating a local SOCKS proxy which passes traffic to the remote system and access the network at the remote end as if it was that machine, and even being a full-out VPN (currently only implemented in OpenSSH). I use the SOCKS proxy feature all the time to access phones on remote customer networks. SSH to the firewall we control with the SOCKS tunnel enabled and switch on the proxy in Firefox, suddenly that browser can access the entire voice LAN at the remote location as if I were there. I can also transfer packet captures back from the firewall over the same session, encrypted and compressed.
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# ? Feb 9, 2018 00:03 |
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Finally managed to get $25 out of nicehash, to coinbase, and into Gyft for an amazon card. Dancing around the geo locks was super annoying but now that it's all learned to accept my work American VPN, it should be pretty straightforward. The 1070 is back up to about $2.5/day which kind of sucks but not completely useless any more. I was considering selling it but it seems that the apocalyptic crash hasn't happened (yet) and I might be able to ride it out closer to the 11xx launch so I don't have to live with the 650Ti.Risky Bisquick posted:SSH over 443 or 80 outbound is clutch Kazinsal posted:I can guarantee you they've been hitting it. They might not have gotten in but if you turn on credential audit logging (Group policy editor, Computer Configuration/Policies/WindowsSettings/Security Settings/Advanced Audit Policy Configuration/Account Logon/Audit Credential Validation, enable logging failures) and watch the Security section of Event Viewer over the course of a day you'll see some crazy poo poo.
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# ? Feb 9, 2018 01:09 |
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DNS tunneling
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# ? Feb 9, 2018 01:11 |
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mobby_6kl posted:I've never noticed anything extraordinary but I just cleared the log so let's see what happens by tomorrow Have fun. The one time I exposed my SSH port to the internet my access log blew up to 5gb in two hours (make sure you're using asymmetric key auth and not just a passphrase)
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# ? Feb 9, 2018 01:34 |
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Only 2 cards left to sell It was real bois
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# ? Feb 9, 2018 04:46 |
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hashes absorbed, soon I will become The One
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# ? Feb 9, 2018 16:46 |
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https://twitter.com/lachlan/status/...er%3D979%23pti1
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# ? Feb 9, 2018 22:29 |
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Risky Bisquick posted:Only Cashed out
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# ? Feb 12, 2018 21:53 |
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Nice job. You touched the poop and got out clean .
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# ? Feb 12, 2018 22:53 |
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This thread is so toast. Here's my winminer history after nicehash stole my 40 dollars. I played a lot of PUBG on xmas break. It's been getting cold at night the last couple days. But the second this room starts getting too warm, this game is over.
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# ? Feb 13, 2018 08:58 |
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I'm back up to about $3/day with the 1070 so I think I'll make it closer to the Ampere release.
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# ? Feb 13, 2018 11:27 |
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Jago posted:This thread is so toast. Same, I am fine with 2 bucks a day cause why not its free money (i dont pay electric) but as soon as it starts to be 85+ outside it's going off.
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# ? Feb 13, 2018 15:49 |
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It's looking like Vitalik is going to get to try his well poisoning this year when Bitmain drops the F3.quote:Bitmain is about to release F3, the ethereum ASIC miner. It’s reported that every miner is mounted with 3 mainboards. On each mainboard there are 6 ASIC processors, each of which has 32 1GB DDR3 memory. Therefore, one unit of F3 miner contains 72 Gigabyte DRAM memory.
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# ? Feb 13, 2018 16:21 |
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Risky Bisquick posted:It's looking like Vitalik is going to get to try his well poisoning this year when Bitmain drops the F3. Looks like it's 650 MH/s at 750W, so roughly 3-4x the efficiency of a GPU. That actually means ASIC-resistance is working, otherwise it would be hundreds/thousands of times more efficient. The only thing ASIC-resistance guarantees is that an ASIC needs to have a GPU-like memory subsystem that can feed it a tremendous amount of bandwidth, compared to the trivial bandwidth of first-gen coins (actually zero for Bitcoin). This means that the limit on efficiency is ultimately the memory subsystem - it does not guarantee that you can't make the actual act of computation more efficient. Remember, at the end of the day a GPU is a kind of ASIC too. It might be better to think of ASIC-resistance as resistance against only trivial ASICs of the kind that wrekt Bitcoin back in 2014. Be interesting to see how Vitalik reacts to this info. PoS seems unlikely to ever work at this point... he's a year and a half behind schedule already and his timeframe slipped back to "3-5 years" in November. It's also worth noting that Ethereum is one of the more memory-hard algorithms out there at the moment, IMO. I really question whether some of the coins based on Lyra2v2 and Equihash are really ASIC-resistant in the first place. Paul MaudDib fucked around with this message at 17:17 on Feb 13, 2018 |
# ? Feb 13, 2018 16:41 |
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By the way, if Bitmain is doing ASICs, that's another strong signal (on top of Ampere/Turing coming) that you should sell your hardware while the getting is good. Each of those Bitmain ASICs will displace 20 580s or 25 570s, at 4x the efficiency. If they can ship them in any real volume (and there's no reason to doubt they can, Bitmain is an established player) then it's going to spike the difficulty real good. Yeah there's other coins to mine but everybody else will be doing that too, and most of those other coins don't have a deep enough network to absorb the kind of capacity that is going to be available after Ethereum goes ASIC. ASICs tanked the GPU market for the first time 4 years ago, they could easily do it again. Paul MaudDib fucked around with this message at 19:43 on Feb 13, 2018 |
# ? Feb 13, 2018 19:41 |
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https://twitter.com/JamesHitchcock/status/963084258708480001 I mean, no one should be reading Salon anyway, but that's goddam hilarious.
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# ? Feb 13, 2018 19:53 |
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Risky Bisquick posted:Cashed out I'm currently in this process. Put about 5k in total, and today recouped that officially with a huge profit of 5(five) dollars in my bank account. The rest of the fun money I put into a couple of mining companies and the contracts expire over the next few months so theoretically I've got another 5k coming, it's all profit now. Cloud mining is a huge scam btw, I'm closing all this stuff and I guess theoretically out of the poop I'd continue in the game but I really don't want a tax headache over this. With all the regulations coming, it's just not going to be worth it. It's sad because all in all it's been about a couple extra hundred per month which is not huge but it's nice.
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# ? Feb 13, 2018 20:00 |
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Paul MaudDib posted:By the way, if Bitmain is doing ASICs, that's another strong signal (on top of Ampere/Turing coming) that you should sell your hardware while the getting is good. Each of those Bitmain ASICs will displace 20 580s or 25 570s, at 4x the efficiency. If they can ship them in any real volume (and there's no reason to doubt they can, Bitmain is an established player) then it's going to spike the difficulty real good. supposedly bitmain is ordering more 16nm wafers from TSMC per month than nvidia they're going to flood the market with those things
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# ? Feb 13, 2018 20:03 |
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# ? May 22, 2024 02:24 |
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repiv posted:supposedly bitmain is ordering more 16nm wafers from TSMC per month than nvidia Seems really dumb considering Vitalik keeps harping about how Eth is going to switch to Proof of Stake real soon now and miners have less than a year left and so on
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# ? Feb 13, 2018 20:15 |