It doesn’t make a lot of sense for LetsEncrypt to spend time adding support for such certs, since both a domain name and a cert from another CA are cheaper than buying an IPv4 block
It doesn’t make a lot of sense for LetsEncrypt to spend time adding support for such certs, since both a domain name and a cert from another CA are cheaper than buying an IPv4 block
certificates can only be obtained for domain names
That is not true, nothing prevents it on the technical side, and even some trusted CAs sell them under certain conditions
This comment is posted through my personal private instance :)
I tried building lemoa with simple cargo build
, and it says it needs libadwaita 🤔
You can self-host GitHub too, but a license for GitHub Enterprise Server costs a lot of money
A friendly reminder that after more than 3 years since libadwaita’s announcement it still doesn’t provide a way to make it look less horrible and out of place anywhere outside of GNOME’s walled garden
It is very unlikely that someone is gonna bother creating malware for Linux unless it’s a targeted attack
GitHub and GitLab are both public US companies, they are gonna happily comply with any DMCA request they receive
Forget about Reddit. The shittier it gets, the better for us. It will also help keep aggressive haters out of Lemmy by accumulating them outside.
BitTorrent v1 does not hash the files, it hashes chunks (pieces), and they can span multiple files
IMO quality courses wouldn’t cost 0.62 euros each.
The file looks fine on my computer
You gotta be a software engineer 😂
You can try PornoLab if you are comfortable navigating the website in Russian
Oh, that wasn’t my comment
I am probably missing something, my comment doesn’t have any links
I think that should be a question to @phloatingman@monero.town
That is likely because you instance hasn’t pulled the information about the community.
For me the reliable way to make it do so is to type it into a search bar (in the format !community@instance), as the message in the sidebar of communities on other instances say. And then refresh the page, to see that it actually did that.
Windows: “We dropped support for that thing you bought brand new 5 years ago”
Linux: “We are considering dropping support for something that has existed for longer than you had”