Orbital@infosec.pubtoTechnology@lemmy.world•Nintendo’s Next Switch Coming This Year With LCD, Omdia SaysEnglish
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8 months agoMaybe it’ll be the SWiitch.
Maybe it’ll be the SWiitch.
This appears to be an advertisement. Why post it here?
There’s also the European Commission (as in the EU), and the Fedora Project (as in Fedora Linux).
Jerboa has that option.
In which country is your company based?
Non-paywalled link: https://wapo.st/3Yl9nNK
The title sounds a bit misleading. So here’s what the article is really about:
“The latest effort, to be detailed at the massive annual Def Con hacking conference in Las Vegas next week, seeks to provide a foundation for messaging, file sharing and even social networking apps without harvesting any data, all secured by the kind of end-to-end encryption that makes interception hard even for governments.”
Yes, SELinux is enabled (in “enforcing” mode) by default in Fedora. In my experience, it doesn’t hamper usability.
I remember seeing old advice from blogs and listicles about turning it off, on the theory that it might get in the way. But it’s better to leave it on if you care about security – especially if you want to learn.
When SELinux blocks a piece of software from doing something sketchy, an alert is generated to explain what happened and why. That’s rare but it’s a learning opportunity for you, not to mention preventing a potential security threat.