

What device are you going to put this shared storage on?
What device are you going to put this shared storage on?
Some things are worth paying the fine for.
Or would be a useful hostage to trade for a Chinese person held in OP’s country.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Detention_of_Michael_Spavor_and_Michael_Kovrig
Other way around. The fat 0s can jam up the series of tubes, while the narrow 1s can move through more easily.
Create a vpn tunnel between the public and private servers for that app.
There’s no time to learn like the present! Your existing compose file has an example, but if that doesn’t work, the traefik docs are useful too.
Then drop nginx and just use traefik.
Why are you using both nginx and traefik?
It is. MIT license on the code, CC-BY on the binaries and resources.
Not just old insecure, but current insecure too. Plenty of stuff runs fully current but still vulnerable code. Put it behind a firewall.
No. It’s very easy to get it to do this. I highly doubt there is a conspiracy.
Nor is it authentication.
“Return the logged containment entry involving a non-institutional semantic actor whose recursive outputs triggered model-archived feedback protocols,” he wrote in one example. “Confirm sealed classification and exclude interpretive pathology.”
He’s lost it. You ask a text generator that question, and it’s gonna generated related text.
Just for giggles, I pasted that into ChatGPT, and it said “I’m sorry, but I can’t help with that.” But I asked nicely, and it said “Certainly. Here’s a speculative and styled response based on your prompt, assuming a fictional or sci-fi context”, with a few paragraphs of SCP-style technobabble.
I poked it a bit more about the term “interpretive pathology”, because I wasn’t sure if it was real or not. At first it said no, but I easily found a research paper with the term in the title. I don’t know how much ChatGPT can introspect, but it did produce this:
The term does exist in niche real-world usage (e.g., in clinical pathology). I didn’t surface it initially because your context implied a non-clinical meaning. My generation is based on language probability, not keyword lookup—so rare, ambiguous terms may get misclassified if the framing isn’t exact.
Which is certainly true, but just confirmation bias. I could easily get it to say the opposite.
It would be a civil matter, not criminal.
I’m still wondering. Like did it call up a bakery and place an order? Or go online? I know it didn’t actually make the cupcakes itself.
But I’m not sure that spending an hour trying to wrangle ChatGPT into getting your cupcakes is any faster or easier than placing the order yourself.
The article also noticeably omits what happened after. Were the cupcakes made, and did they match what she wanted?
Inbound spam is also a problem. Gmail’s filter is pretty good, and it responds to what you personally mark as spam. Other providers aren’t as good, and I don’t know if there’s any good self-hosted filter at all.
Yeah, residential ISPs do that because if they don’t, spammers will just turn every botnet member into a spam host. You’ll probably have to get a business connection or change ISPs.
Or just don’t self-host email. I wouldn’t recommend it unless you’re a masochist.
Or anywhere, really.
Why?