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re #1: the email could link to a github pages site hosting the same malware...

re #2: it doesn't really have you typing into shell, 'just paste'


I did the same, i recommend getting the moes or similar IR blaster (tyua under the plastic). Treat yourself and get a combo temp/humidity sensor + IR.

For one of the rooms i opted for a IR/RF transmitter and the RF covers any RF enabled devices in the house (433mhz + 315mhz[i think but haven’t tested])


Office Of Naval Research did a human trial https://youtu.be/TIGCdA2YLyY?si=z_7RK06wLO7T926D&t=409


IIRC he got pneumonia due to difficulties removing the fluid from his lungs afterwards.

That first bit, where you breathe in the fluid, must be horrendous. No thanks!


I think you mean CDs/DVDs are non magnetic and can be read with a microscope.


And even with CD's there are issues.

Writable CD/DVDs have a written shelf life of about 25 years before the layers start to deteriorate and the best ones have a max lifespan guarantee of 100 years. They do rot, just slowly. With a microscope you can of course stretch that a bit but they won't last forever.


Perhaps I was wrong, thanks.


The CDs/DVDs use a metallic mirror. With the exception of certain expensive CDs made for archival purposes, e.g. by Kodak, which used a gold mirror, the reflective layer can oxidize in time, becoming transparent, when it no longer reflects the light.

The pressed CD-ROMs/DVD-ROMs still have pits in the polycarbonate disc, even when the mirror is no longer reflective. Those could still be read with a more sophisticated microscope, e.g. by using phase contrast.

The recordable CD-Rs/DVD-Rs used an organic dye for storing the bits and after a long enough time that dye can be completely degraded and it can become impossile to read.

The rewritable CD-RWs/DVD-RWs store the bits in a layer that can be either amorphous or crystalline, with different reflectivities. After a long enough time, that layer can recrystallize, erasing the bits.

Of all the optical discs that have been available commercially, those with the longest archival time were the pressed CD-ROM with gold mirrors, where the only degradation mechanism is the depolymerization of the polycarbonate, which could make them fragile, but when kept at reasonable temperatures and humidities that should require many centuries.

There have been experiments with write-once optical memories where the bits are stored in an inorganic glass that should easily last for many millennia, but until now I have not heard of commercial products. In any case, none exist at an affordable price.


The M-DISC should last for centuries in a typical vault, and they're about 3x the price of blank Blu-Ray.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M-DISC


Strange, from my own measurements, I remember the co2 levels to be sub-600.


The study i saw this on was a review of data from 200ish US domestic flights. Maybe you were close to a vent, or some other variable im not thinking of, or just an outlier


Possibly increased ventilation post-COVID?



the SIM card will have this information, also if you put your phone in lost mode, it gives you the option to display a contact number



cloudflare firewall rule that I think will help protect against this:

   (not http.request.uri.path contains "." and any(http.request.headers["content-range"][*] contains "bytes"))
my dynamic pages shouldn't contain any . (extension) so if a request contains content-range: bytes*, we challenge the request.

you may have to modify for your needs



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