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Yeah, but that security patch level.
Yeah, but that security patch level.
And what’s wrong with asking that? Plenty of email platforms let you change your primary SMTP address and/or add/remove aliases.
It’s a legitimate question. And it could be that the lack of ability to change it has a perfectly logical answer. It still wouldn’t invalidate the question.
In Chromium browsers you can simply type “thisisunsafe” to bypass even HSTS failures.
They mean CAA records:
https://developers.cloudflare.com/ssl/edge-certificates/caa-records/
You need to demand a raise. And keep working from home.
Right, because international hackers are going to mobilize boots on the ground across the world to steal your fucking Optiplex.
The rootkit is easy enough to turn off in the BIOS but I highly, highly recommend G-Helper instead of Armoury Crate.
Moving to it from AC is like leaving a prison cell full of screaming children and entering a calm beach.
ASAs are still way more prevalent than they should be when Palo Alto and others are much better options. Still, I’m glad I barely have to deal with them any more.
You connect directly to the ESXi host with root. Because you’re going to have to boot up vCenter in addition to the DC anyway when you’re using SSO. I would use DRS rules to prefer host1 for vCenter and the PDCe for that reason.
Only in the very early days of virtualization (2008-2012) did I recommend keeping a physical server around. I know a lot more now than I did then.
But anymore, I don’t recommend using SSO for hypervisors or backup infrastructure. It’s better to add another wall in front of an attacker trying to laterally move onto these critical platforms for ransom, data exfiltration, etc.
And in reality, these “kaboom events” aren’t terribly common unless you’ve neglected some other part of your infrastructure.
I still fail to see how that’s the product’s fault.
Is there some ransomware-proof backup solution that you find most people do set up correctly?
Why name drop Veeam as if they’re part of the problem?
They at least have good options to protect backups from ransomware with Linux hardened repos and immutable object storage.
Just mark it as final then. This whole thread is infuriating. People working themselves into pretzels with their misguided reasons for not wanting auto-save when they really just don’t know to use the software.
OP is right. I use Office 365 and haven’t lost work on a document in over 10 years. Auto-save absolutely should be the default.
Yes it does make sense. Because the insurance companies operate completely on hypotheticals. And that has a very real cost to the business being insured.
It’s sort of fixed via Teams Connect, but it involves admins setting up new B2B direct relationships alongside special Shared channels. But 99% of admins aren’t aware this even exists, let alone the end users.
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/entra/external-id/b2b-direct-connect-overview
Hyper-V is decent. It’s VMM that is atrocious. Hopefully you don’t have Citrix with MCS catalogs.