I hope he/she got a bounty for it!
Bing Chat seems to have put my wuzzi.net domain on some kind of “dirty list”, so I will have to move my AI test cases elsewhere.
lol
I hope he/she got a bounty for it!
Bing Chat seems to have put my wuzzi.net domain on some kind of “dirty list”, so I will have to move my AI test cases elsewhere.
lol
nice! I didn’t know this plant. I’ll try to find some.
it’s impressive! How does your infrastructure looks like? Is it 100% on prem?
I like basil. At some point I i got tired of killing all the plants and started learning how to properly grow and care greens with basil.
It has plenty of uses and it requires the right amount of care, not too simple not too complex.
I’ve grown it from seeds, cuttings, in pots, outside and in hydroponics.
This is the official statement I think: https://global.toyota/jp/newsroom/corporate/39174380.html but it's light on details (I think, I google translated)
From reading around it looks like it was either a compute instance or a database exposed by mistake, nothing sophisticated.
Maybe it's enough to make a pull request to the original CSS files here? I would guess the Lemmy devs would rather focus more on the backend right now
I think access keys are a legacy authentication mechanism from a time where the objective was increasing cloud adoption and public clouds wanted to support customers to transition from on prem to cloud infra.
But for cloud native environments there are safer ways to authenticate.
A data point: for GCP now Google also advise new customers to enable from the start the org policy to disable service account key creation.
great! Have you consider packing this up as a full theme for Lemmy?
I found it interesting because starting from NVD, CVSS etc we have a whole industry (Snyk, etc) that is taking vuln data, mostly refuse to contextualize it and just wrap it in a nice interface for customers to act on.
The lack of deep context shines when you have vulnerability data for os packages, which might have a different impact if your workloads are containerized or not. Nobody seems to really care that much, they sell a wet blanket and we are happy to buy for the convenience.
is that so? what's the reason?
You build a derivation yourself... which I never do. I am on mac so I brew install and orchestrate brew from home manager. I find it works good as a compromise.