my point was that even if they don't have unlimited ips they might have a lot of them, especially if its ipv6, so you couldn't just block them. but you can use anubis that doesn't rely on ip filtering
edinbruh
joined 2 years ago
There's always Anubis 🤷
Anyway, what if they are backed by some big Chinese corporation with some /32 ipv6 and some /16 ipv4? It's not that unreasonable
The hedgedog
I think that's a syndrome
It doesn't turn off, you have to manually burn oxygen molecules with every cell constantly to live
It's a ufw rule. I also have two iptables rules but they have nothing to do with this
But in this case it's something it should do, it's a rule not behaving like it should (probably because I'm missing something)
Kali user
found the problem
Wsl runs on hyper-v. I don't think you can use it in a VM
A lot of FOSS software's websites are starting to use it lately, starting from the gnome foundation, that's what popularized it.
The idea of proof of work itself came from spam emails, of all places. One proposed but never adopted way of preventing spam was hashcash, which required emails to have a proof of work embedded in the email. Bitcoins came after this borrowing the idea