What Are You Doing Right Now
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@MattSpeller said:
@IRJ lol good grief, go buy a lottery ticket then
you mess with exchange and sooner or later it'll get you. I speak from experience.
I have been managing Exchange since Exchange 2000.
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I have 1 hour and 20 minutes until I escape these walls and venture forth to frolic freely; wind in what's left of my hair, northern hemisphere's gentle sunshine reflecting off my pale, scarred old carcass.
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@scottalanmiller said:
No offense to all of the people on here from third world countries
Good morning to all from third world country!
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Uploading bunches of data to owncloud. And found out how my mom keeps track of her accounts.
She has a word doc file for each site named "Sitename USER NAME IS username.doc" and all it contains is the password for the site. -
@thecreativeone91 said:
Uploading bunches of data to owncloud. And found out how my mom keeps track of her accounts.
She has a word doc file for each site named "Sitename USER NAME IS username.doc" and all it contains is the password for the site.Wow
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Slow night on MangoLassi.
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Friday night is the slowest time of the week.
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Cracker Barrel with my niece.
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Working on the ML staging server....
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Realized I might have given my landlord too much credit...I needed to forward ports on his router, which mine piggybacks off of, to my router for various things, (like FTP, HTTP, SSH and 32400 for Plex) and he wouldn't give me the password, so I assume he'd set it. It's the standard-issue Verizon router. Password is written on the side of the router. It's still that. The whole configuration was the Verizon default, and I know he never goes in it. So now I have full access to local and C@C resources again!
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@thanksajdotcom said:
Realized I might have given my landlord too much credit...I needed to forward ports on his router, which mine piggybacks off of, to my router for various things, (like FTP, HTTP, SSH and 32400 for Plex) and he wouldn't give me the password, so I assume he'd set it. It's the standard-issue Verizon router. Password is written on the side of the router. It's still that. The whole configuration was the Verizon default, and I know he never goes in it. So now I have full access to local and C@C resources again!
Be careful, from what I recall this is technically breaking the law, of which you just admitted on a public forum.
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@coliver said:
Be careful, from what I recall this is technically breaking the law, of which you just admitted on a public forum.
Just using Internet off of the router is already doing that. The landlord is technically stealing Internet access and reselling it to renters.
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Re-doing my resume.
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Waiting to take my niece to the airport. She flies out at like 4am. So I'm not going to bed until after I drop her off.
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Just got the kids in bed. Took them to see Cinderella after Japanese school today.
The new short Frozen: Fever was cute. New dress for the stores /sigh
Cinderella itself was really nice. My kids were alternately bored and excited as the events in the movie varied from a bit too old for them to understand to simpler.
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@coliver said:
@thanksajdotcom said:
Realized I might have given my landlord too much credit...I needed to forward ports on his router, which mine piggybacks off of, to my router for various things, (like FTP, HTTP, SSH and 32400 for Plex) and he wouldn't give me the password, so I assume he'd set it. It's the standard-issue Verizon router. Password is written on the side of the router. It's still that. The whole configuration was the Verizon default, and I know he never goes in it. So now I have full access to local and C@C resources again!
Be careful, from what I recall this is technically breaking the law, of which you just admitted on a public forum.
I don't see how. As far as his router is concerned, it's just another device. Also, I don't have my own apartment or meter. I'm a resident at the same address as him, and I pitch in towards some of the bills.
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@scottalanmiller , I keep my own network to segregate traffic and keep my devices separate from his. However, his device is the modem, so I have to connect to that. Nothing illegal about it.
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@thanksajdotcom said:
I don't see how. As far as his router is concerned, it's just another device. Also, I don't have my own apartment or meter. I'm a resident at the same address as him, and I pitch in towards some of the bills.
Is he a landlord or do you co-rent? That's the different. If you pay rent, and he resells the service to you, he's reselling something.
That you are "just another device" isn't relevant. It has to do with his ability to resell a non-commercial service.
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@thanksajdotcom said:
@coliver said:
@thanksajdotcom said:
Realized I might have given my landlord too much credit...I needed to forward ports on his router, which mine piggybacks off of, to my router for various things, (like FTP, HTTP, SSH and 32400 for Plex) and he wouldn't give me the password, so I assume he'd set it. It's the standard-issue Verizon router. Password is written on the side of the router. It's still that. The whole configuration was the Verizon default, and I know he never goes in it. So now I have full access to local and C@C resources again!
Be careful, from what I recall this is technically breaking the law, of which you just admitted on a public forum.
I don't see how. As far as his router is concerned, it's just another device. Also, I don't have my own apartment or meter. I'm a resident at the same address as him, and I pitch in towards some of the bills.
billing tenants for utilities not in their own name is illegal in many localities. But aside from that. You just admitted to gaining unauthorized access to a device. which is illegal. (US Code 1030 deals with this).