I’m Wren (they/them). I’m a programmer and cybersecurity researcher. I have a blog I don’t update enough.

  • 5 Posts
  • 28 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: September 1st, 2024

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  • Yeah, its running a website. All ports are on default deny except 22, 80, 443, and 9050. 9050 is for the onion version of the site, and 80 auto-redirects to the https version of the site. 22 is rate limited to help protect against brute-force attacks. The requests are coming from multiple IPs, some of them are 117.72.47.192, 172.71.184.89, and 162.158.87.100. the one that sent that specific packet is 82.147.85.33 and no user agent is provided. Most of the malicious packets have user agents attached, but that specific one doesn’t I also am seeing another weird one sent by 138.197.16.14

    "238\x00ll|'|'|SGFjS2VkX0Q3NUU2QUFB|'|'|WIN-QZN7FJ7D1O|'|'|Administrator|'|'|19-11-28|'|'||'|'|Win 10 Pro x64|'|'|No|'|'|S17|'|'|..|'|'|SW5ib3ggLSBPdXRsb29rIERhdGEgRmlsZSAtIE1pY3Jvc29mdCBPdXRsb29rAA==|'|'|" 400 166 "-" "-"
    






  • I already have a dark theme set, I’m using catppuccin’s colors What I’m trying to have it do is when a button is pressed, it switches to the light version of it

    currently my code looks something like this:

    #theme-toggle:checked ~ body {
      background-color: #eff1f5;
      color: #fff;
    }
    
    #theme-toggle:checked ~ html {
      background-color: #eff1f5;
    }
    
    #theme-toggle:checked ~ .content {
      background-color: #eff1f5;
    }
    

    the button itself is a checkbox that has display set to none and the label set as an svg so when you click the icon, it gets checked.

    <input style="display: none;" type="checkbox" id="theme-toggle">
                    <label for="theme-toggle" class="theme-button">
                        <img class="theme-button-svg" src="./icons/half-moon.svg">
                    </label>
    

    I used a similar strategy when making the menu for the site so I know it should work








  • Really they all work the same as long as they’re based on the same OS. I’ve done a lot of distro hopping and the only real difference I’ve seen is the desktop environment, package managers(sometimes), and pre-installed applications.

    Even then, all of these can be changed. I would suggest picking a distro that best suits your needs by default and then add what you need from there.

    I personally have been really happy with Linux Mint.



  • what it protects against is group ideology. I don’t want to start thinking things simply because the political party I align most with thinks that, and unfortunately, identifying with a political group can make people start doing that. I do recognize my biases when making decisions, it’s important to do so, I just find it becomes harder to do that when I start identifying with a group