Why would that be a DOS? The hash of something is always the same length. Might only take a bit more time to compute, but a million characters isn’t that much with modern hardware. If anything, the risk of collisions would be higher.
Informatik Student, lerne 日本語, Strategiespiele
Why would that be a DOS? The hash of something is always the same length. Might only take a bit more time to compute, but a million characters isn’t that much with modern hardware. If anything, the risk of collisions would be higher.
I work in Cybersecurity. Things do not feel as secure as they should be.
Just switched the Mailserver for my domain to proton (they offer hosting on custom domains), the email service is pretty good after you set things up.
Sadly, their other cloud services Lack Integration.
To add to some that the others said: A world federation.
After the European Union eventually grew together to the European federation, many nations pushed to cooperate against worldwide problems. This eventually resulted in the continuous strengthening of the United Nations. Over time, nationality became more and more meaningless until eventually the point was reached that any of us only consider themselves part of the United Nations of earth. At last, humanity united.
ええ、難しいだ。でも、日本語が大好き。
Sure I can talk a little. First things first: If you’re hosting on windows, you should probably use a different OS.
If you’re looking for something easily manageable, there is a couple of specifically made systems made for easy administration, True as comes to mind, but that’s not what I use.
If you’re more proficient, or ready to learn, you should really have a Linux distro on your server. I recommend Debian 12, but there is many valid choices.
When setting this kind of system up, the essential service that you want to run all the time is SSH, as that’s how you will configure and use the server. On Debian 12, you can just check a box in the installer and it will set up ssh for you.
After that, you don’t need a screen or keyboard on your server anymore, just go to any of your work stations and go ssh user@(your server IP)
and boom you get a shell on your server.
Okay, so now what? Think about what you want to host. Then just look up the documentation of your stuff. Learn Docker, as it will make hosting way easier. If you’re a friend of the visual click click interface, you’d probably want portainer.
With docker, you can host a ton of service without actually having to do a lot of configuring with them. Want to host a database? Marinade Want to host a media server? Plex
Okay, now you probably think that sounds way too complicated and are about to get demotivated. Now you see, the most important thing is to start. If you set it up yourself, your first server will be a mess, and that’s okay. You will scream at docker because it does weird things, you will scream because your Webserver finally connects with the database and you can play your music and you will break things to the point where you will just reinstall. It’s a great learning experience.
Some time later, you will just go “hey that service sounds cool”, copy some compose file, tweak it a bit, and boom you hosted a new service in a couple minutes.
About ressources: I mostly use just what’s provided by the stuff I want to use. A lot of my information that goes directly to the act of hosting comes from Readme files in git repositories or descriptions on docker hub. Besides that, search for things you encounter.
In general, I’ve found the first party documentation of the things I use in tech to be the most reliable, but that seems not for everyone.
There isn’t a magic central Ressource, besides your head when you remember doing something before. Selfhosting/Homelab communities on Reddit or now Lemmy can help with ideas.
Learn a language. It’s a great thing and you can easily do it instead of browsing social medias while traveling. I started with japanese about 5 months ago and can understand some phrases of native speakers already.
Programming is great.
On that note, kinda similar: Selfhost your services. There is a lot of cool software that you can run on your old computer, or on a more dedicated machine. A file storage, a media server, your very own AI server, the lost is endless.
On my computers, I just use thunderbird. For Android, I recently discovered feeder (available in FDroid)
Thats a obvious oversight by me. Worth a try still.
Plus, I can go anywhere instantly as long as I’m in private.
Upvote For German bureaucracy. Passierschein A38 bitte.
Teleportation by thinking of a place
Could you not just disable JavaScript to get around that?