Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | seized's commentslogin

Look at Bitwardens Emergency Access:

https://bitwarden.com/help/emergency-access/

Would also cover banking details or whatever else you want to put in there.


> Trusted emergency contacts must be existing Bitwarden users

While the motivation is similar this basically kills the feature. It requires that your friends not only use but continue to maintain their accounts.

From my understanding of OP's implementation, being completely offline they can basically just keep the key on a USB or file store of any kind.

Personally I think the most robust solution is single key access (a la emergency kit), distributed in one or more secure bank vaults for redundancy (many still do offer these for free or cheaply for small boxes). Put instructions in your (living) will and done.


> just keep the key on a USB or file store of any kind

Similar arguments could be made against this too: trusted contacts need to make sure the USB isn't damaged or lost and that the files haven't been corrupted. At the end of the day, these types of recovery flows require some level of engagement which in itself is an issue since human beings are very flawed.


I've been using OpenIndiana on my NAS for a very long time. Rock solid OS, zones are fun to use, boot environments are just so nice.... Some random tools are compatible and work, like rclone. Recently installed versitygw as an S3 to filesystem gateway and that works perfectly.


The music one was never available but the metadata one can be found and still works.


Calla the "a" in other fonts fugly, does that with the lowercase "i"... Something about living in glass houses maybe.


i don't like the lowercase "a" because i dont understand why it looks like a backwards six... i don't understand why it has that tail on top...


Kagi has this bang redirect feature too.


There were many portable CD players with enough buffering that they'd never skip. Panasonic Shockwave (IIRC) for example. And car heatunits.

You had to get a very old or seriously cheap portable player to get skipping.


Probably helps that the stance is likely "Hack this target or your family dies". That's always pretty uhhhh motivational.


Why would they need such incentives? All they gotta do is give them a decent wage and they will be happy, which in North Korea is a paltry sum. Its not like regular North Koreans are traveling around the world, they couldn't afford it even without any other restrictions, so they have zero risk of arrest or punishment from other nations.

If I told you today that I will pay you a million dollars to go fuck around with some North Korean servers, and doing it completely anonymously with the full protection and sanction of your government, would you say no?

I think you may have some unrealistic views on how North Korea operates internally. 99% of their population lives completely normal lives and has zero extra interactions with the government beyond basic grunt military service which is common across much of the world, and paperwork for licensing, permits, and taxes. We only see the worst possible views of North Korea from the outside, slathered with thick layers of additional propaganda on top of it.


Completely normal lives may be stretching your speech a bit too far. They provably had hundreds of thousands of deaths in famines when surrounding countries thrived, they have absolutely horrendous concentration camps where people are frequently beaten to death for small infractions and whole families are sent there, including small children (who also get beaten to death by their 'teachers').

If you consider numerous reports of people that managed to barely escape and report this consistently in the west as pure propaganda, thats... your paranoid mindset. Sometimes people and regimes are simply evil, 21st century is in no way immune to that.


Any sources for these numerous reports of teachers beating small children to death beyond "trust me bro?"


I couldn't find any sources for widespread beatings of children to death by teachers.

>Ahn noted that prisoners detained in the punishment chambers were often crippled after three months and dead within five months. Ahn and other former guards have testified to the brutality that they were encouraged to demonstrate while punishing prisoners. Former guards have confessed that they were taught not to view prisoners as humans. However, the number of deaths from beating prisoners was so high that at one point, the guards were encouraged to be less violent. https://www.state.gov/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/Prisons-of-...

>One inmate recalls that as a 10-year-old he was told to lift a 30kg sack of earth (more than his own body weight) 30 times a day. If he slipped he was beaten with sticks by his teachers. Kang Cheol-hwan (former Yodok inmate. He was detained with family as a young boy). Here called: The work was too much for me or for any child of my age. But I did not dare to complain. After the first ten rounds, my legs started shaking, my body was hurting and my shoulder skin was peeling off. I was near collapse but the teachers were watching us and beating us with sticks if we stopped.”

>Kang Cheol-hwan also recalls deaths of children who were working at a work site. “The children in my class were ordered to dig and move earth to a work site 200 metres away. Twelve children dug holes with shovels and the other children carried the dirt in sacks or buckets. The dig site was a clay hill and the clay was quite soft. But we were afraid that as we dug deeper, it could collapse at any time. The teachers who were supervising us told the children to keep digging. After three days, the hill suddenly collapsed. There were six children who were on top of the hill when it collapsed. Three children were killed and the other three were badly injured. However, the teachers blamed the children for the carelessness.”

>Between the ages of 13 and 16, Shin recalled: “I was forced to undertake dangerous work and saw many children killed in work. Sometimes, four to five children were killed in a day. On one occasion, I saw eight people killed by an accident. Three men were working high up on a tall cement wall, three 15-year-old girls and two boys were helping them with mortar below. I was carrying mortar to the children when I saw the cement wall falling. Eight were buried under many tons of mortar; there was no rescue. Instead, the security officers told us not to stop work.” https://www.amnesty.org/en/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/asa240...

>Security officials armed with machine guns gathered together all the political prisoners at the camp to witness the hanging of the two adults and the execution by firing squad of the three children.

>“Interviews were conducted with 35 defectors who had escaped from various detention facilities in the preceding 18-month period, and 31 of them testified to having witnessed the killing of newborns.” https://web.archive.org/web/20141006072142/https://www.kinu....


> That's always pretty uhhhh motivational

If you only met the world on American TV, yes.


Maybe they hire international talent.


Hire is not always the correct word. There is evidence they acquire international talent without consent.


tragically, this is exactly what it is


Not quite so clean.

VE can be a cluster of nodes that you can still manage via the same UI. ESXi cant do that, ESXi UI is a single node, and not even everything that a single node can do with vCenter added.

Proxmox VE is both ESXi and some/most of vCenter.


It's in beta, but HAProxy has a gateway product:

https://www.haproxy.com/blog/announcing-haproxy-unified-gate...


Love haproxy but if we’re shilling projects istio is superior. Multi cluster, hbone, ambient.


What is hbone? What is ambient?


> istio is superior

It's also eating a significant amount of your compute and memory


Lots more moving pieces though


There are many Gateway implementations: https://gateway-api.sigs.k8s.io/implementations/


Not really, those people go to a hospital where there is a duty of care. Hospitals don't get to just say "Nah, not gonna help you" and close the door for people showing up in the ED.

So those vaccine deniers get sick, lose their commitment, go to the ED, get some level of treatment/help/etc, and suck up resources and impact help for the guy who got vaccinated then got hit by someone running a red light....


Also, they will help spread the disease around, chances to hit some less fortunate chaps increasing with every new carrier.


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: