Best practice for mail-servers is to turn on TLS by default, which means that when that mail server talks to other mail servers, it encrypts the connection to thwart eavesdroppers. Though the practice (sometimes called "opportunistic encryption") started out as something only paranoid organizations partook of, it's now so widespread that Google warns you if you attempt to use Gmail to send a message to someone whose server won't accept encrypted connections. (more…)
Friday, 3 March 2017
Popular Posts
-
Looking for something to illustrate a post about crunch-time in game development, I ran into this video depicting many forms of footwear (...
-
You might not know this, but the editors of Wikipedia maintain an automated list of all the world's cookies. The have everything from ...
-
In First Contact , Book 1 of David Marusek’s ( previously ) science fiction series Upon This Rock , an alien being crash lands in a remote c...
-
https://vimeo.com/71952791 What happens if you allow a group of onlookers to do anything they want to you for six hours? Marina Abramovich ...
-
Cryptocurrency: Seemingly overnight, it's gone from a curious sidebar in the world of economics to the driving force behind the fortunes...
-
This fascinating infographic compares the values of various assets (gold, silver, cryptocurrency, real estate, stocks, and so on) by presen...
-
Gucci has withdrawn an $890 roll-neck sweater designed to resemble a stereotypical black charicature when pulled over the face. It seems th...
-
The other website I edit is called Cool Tools , which features reader-written reviews of tools they love. For the last couple of years, we...
-
RAWIllumination.net announced today that a manuscript by Robert Anton Wilson has been found and will be published by RVP Publishers in the...
-
Just days after Hawaii issued a false alarm about an incoming ballistic missile from North Korea, a Japanese broadcaster made a similar mis...
Powered by Blogger.



