I've said it before, and I'll say it again:
The only thing stopping global IPv6 deployment is
Netflix continuing to offer services over IPv4.
If Netflix dropped IPv4, you would see IPv6 available *everywhere*
within a month.
--lyndon
> > How many legacy mail clients can handle IPv6?
I would suspect all of them, since MUAs, by definition, are not
involved in any mail transport operations. But if you're thinking
of MUAs that use Submission, they are unlikely to care one whit
what the underlying transport is. You configure a s
And what are they going to do when 240/4 runs out?
OFFS people, spare me the bikeshed. It was a simple yes/no question.
In case you missed it, here is the decision tree:
/---\
| START |
\---/
|
|
^
/ \
/ \
/ \
/ \
/ \
/Do Yo
Diogo Montagner writes:
> --728632060377d0b2
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
>
> I would first try to understand what you are trying to achieve. JUNOS is
> very flexible on this front and I am wondering why you think yacc is the
> right way to achieve what you are trying to
Nick Hilliard writes:
> No need to reinvent that wheel:
>
> root@foo> show configuration | display xml
> root@foo> show configuration | display json
That doesn't quite work for this scenario. It would mean ssh-ing
to the switch to grab it, and that's pretty locked down. We already
have cron job
Any chance somebody out there has a yacc grammar that will parse
a Juniper config files? My immediate interest involves v19.X on
our EX4300s, but anything in the ballpark would save me having to
write one from scratch.
--lyndon
For the hams attending 88, should we pick a simplex
frequency or two to rendevouz on for beer consumption
planning purposes? I'll be armed with a tribander for
146/222/440.
--lyndon
Forrest Christian (List Account) writes:
> I'm also wondering if this might be a "no one that has got the request
> actually has a clue how to resolve your issues" issue. I've seen
> situations where companies don't know how to respond to a request outside
> the most common requests they get.
Forrest Christian (List Account) writes:
> I can't speak for aptum, but I'm curious as to why this is important to
> you? I'm not trying to discount this at all, just curious why this
> matters in the internet of 2023.
Two main reasons.
1) We are trying to set up internal peering with AWS, an
It seems Aptum has decided they will no longer SWIP any of their
address space. I've been trying to get a SWIP for a /48 that we
were allocated in 2017, but they refuse. And I also see they have
pro-actively gone in and un-SWIPed both our /24s.
Since you are ignoring my tickets about this, maybe
It has been a couple of decades since I've done any BGP in anger,
but it looks like I will be jumping into the deep end again, soon,
and I desperately need to get up to speed again.
There seem to be a lot of good guides out there from Cisco, Juniper,
and the like, but naturally they are very produ
Robert Schoneman writes:
> I've tested accessing one of our sites that uses Imperva WAF w/ DDOS protec=
> tion enabled from an iPhone w/ Apple Private Relay turned on. I experienced=
> no issues but only have that single test to go on. =20
A couple of people from Cloudflare and Apple contacted me
We have been receiving a steady stream of calls from customers
complaining they cannot reach our websites when they have Apple's
Private Relay enabled.
For those in the dark, Private Relay sends (only) Safari connections
through an assortment of CDNs to anonymize the client's IP address.
What we
Jon Lewis writes:
> > I've noticed a few (small number) of robocalls have started spoofing
> > international phone numbers instead of local phone numbers. I don't know if
> Are you sure this isn't just either a failure to spoof or incompetent
> spoofing?
Nope. I've been seeing an increasing n
Owen DeLong writes:
> top
> rollback
I am *sure* I tried exactly that but it wasn't working as I expected.
But maybe I was just imagining things. And somehow I completely
missed the 'rollback 0' variant while plowing through the
documentation.
Thanks everyone for assisting the blind ;-)
--lynd
Nick Suan via NANOG writes:
> I was actually interested to see if the EX series would let me do this, and i
> t turns out that if STP is enabled on any of the switch interfaces, it won't:
> tevruden@core-02# commit check
> [edit protocols rstp]
> 'interface'
> XSTP : Interface ge-0/0/0.0 is
Marco Davids via NANOG writes:
> rollback 0
OFFS 8-0 Thanks :-)
On an EX4300 switch running JunOS 14.1 let's imagine I typed
config
delete interfaces
before coming to my senses. How am I supposed to back out of that
mess? For the life of me, after a week of reading the 3000 page
reference manual, and endless DuckDuckGoing, I cannot see a sim
> On Apr 21, 2018, at 3:48 PM, Mark Andrews wrote:
>
> You have a logic fail. This fails because it STILL depends on the DNS for
> the zone working.
If the DNS fails to that extent, everything fails. I was addressing the single
application endpoint point-of-failure. But from a practical st
> On Apr 21, 2018, at 2:47 PM, Keith Medcalf wrote:
>
> Actually, a I doubt that there are any "real" people with vanity domains
> behind this move. I suspect that it is the scammers and spammers who want to
> hide their information for very good reason.
>
> And of course, the "powers of the
> On Apr 21, 2018, at 2:27 PM, Lyndon Nerenberg wrote:
>
>> But backup and failover are reasonably well understood technologies
>> where one cares. Registrars could for example cache copies of those
>> zone records and act as failover whois servers.
Sorry! I left ou
> On Apr 21, 2018, at 1:58 PM, b...@theworld.com wrote:
>
> That's actually an excellent point and counterpoint to my suggestion
> to move the WHOIS information into DNS RRs.
>
> But backup and failover are reasonably well understood technologies
> where one cares. Registrars could for example c
> On Dec 28, 2017, at 7:50 PM, valdis.kletni...@vt.edu wrote:
>
> Comcast is passing out CPE that provides a subnet for the actual subscriber,
> and another one for *other* Comcast roaming customers. And somehow this
> works for a company the size of Comcast without the customers needing to know
> On Dec 28, 2017, at 7:26 PM, Brock Tice wrote:
>
> Most of our customers only have 2-5 devices. I know this is not the case
> in most of America but we are quite rural and for many people they've
> never had better than 1.5Mbps DSL until we install service at their
> location. Most of them hav
> On Dec 28, 2017, at 7:28 PM, Tony Wicks wrote:
>
> I think its time you all had a bit of a holiday break and stopped thinking
> of IP networking for a little while, Just saying...
Nah. This is a useful conversation (and argument) to have.
> On Dec 28, 2017, at 6:54 PM, Ricky Beam wrote:
>
> Home networks with multiple LANs??? Never going to happen; people don't know
> how to set them up, and there's little technical need for it.
Again, you are assuming you know how people will use networks forever.
Stop overthinking things,
Peripherally, it's worth noting that, in far less time then we have not
migrated from IPv4 to IPv6, the UK moved from 7-digit to 11-digit telephone
numbers. If that's not embarrassing ...
--lyndon
> On Dec 28, 2017, at 6:11 PM, Scott Weeks wrote:
>
> All I was trying to say is there're going to be things
> not thought of yet that will chew up address space
> faster than ever before now that everyone believes it's
> essentially inexhaustible. And, I expect, sooner than
> imagined.
If
> :: Isn't this the utopia we've been seeking out?
>
> I like that one! :-)
Seriously. If we run out of networks while handing out /48s, by migrating
everything to HTTPS we can claw back the 16 bit 'port' field in the IP header
and reassign it as part of the 140-bit IPv6.1 address space.
Min
> On Dec 28, 2017, at 4:57 PM, Lyndon Nerenberg wrote:
>
> Instead, think about how we can carve up a 2^61 address space (based on the
> current /3 active global allocation pool) between 2^32 people (Earth's
> current population)
Of course, I screwed up the number
> On Dec 28, 2017, at 3:28 PM, Brock Tice wrote:
>
> We are currently handing out /52s to customers. Based on a reasonable
> sparse allocation scheme that would account for future growth that
> seemed like the best option.
Could you detail the reasoning behind your allocation scheme? I.e., wha
> On Dec 28, 2017, at 2:31 PM, Thomas Bellman wrote:
>
> My problem with the IPv6 addressing scheme is not the waste of 64 bits
> for the interface identifier, but the lack of bits for the subnet id.
> 16 bits (as you normally get a /48) is not much for a semi-large organi-
> zation, and will fo
> On Dec 4, 2017, at 3:19 AM, Edwin Pers wrote:
>
> As an anecdotal aside, approx. 70% of incoming portscanners/rdp bots/ssh
> bots/etc that hit the firewalls at my sites are coming from AWS.
> I used to send abuse emails but eventually gave up after receiving nothing
> beyond "well, aws ip's
> On Oct 5, 2017, at 4:52 PM, Steve Feldman wrote:
>
> I have a vague recollection of parts of 192.168.0.0/16 being used as default
> addresses on early Sun systems. If that's actually true, it might explain
> that choice.
192.9.200.X rings a bell; but those might have been the example addre
> On Sep 20, 2017, at 6:40 PM, Sean Donelan wrote:
>
> Some ham radio operators have been verified as operating from Dominica. Its
> an unfortunate, but necessary thing that needs to be verified during disaster
> communications.
I'm not clear what you're getting at here. Are you saying peopl
> On Aug 27, 2016, at 6:46 PM, Matt Palmer wrote:
>
> On Sat, Aug 27, 2016 at 01:25:42AM -, John Levine wrote:
>> In article
>> you
>> write:
>>> I was working within the limits of what I had available.
>>
>> Here's the subscription page for mailop. It's got about as odd
>> a mix of peo
> On Feb 23, 2017, at 6:10 PM, Ricky Beam wrote:
>
> When you can do that in the timespan of weeks or days, get back to me.
Stop thinking in the context of bits of fake news on your phone. Start
thinking in the context of trans-national agreements that will soon be signed
by such keys.
--ly
Canada should just have Comcast (or is it "Xfinity"?) provided nation-wide
Internet service as a for-profit monopoly.
Just as long as we have *someone* to Telus whom to chose.
> On Oct 3, 2016, at 6:52 PM, Lyndon Nerenberg wrote:
>
> It's the closed software that is fscking everything up right now. A little
> sunshine on the code base will go a long way towards those people not losing
> their Ferrari's after all.
Or coming from a more
> On Oct 3, 2016, at 6:33 PM, Matthew Petach wrote:
>
> If you hold the executives of the hardware manufacturer
> responsible for the software running on their devices,
> then the next generation of hardware from every
> manufacturer is going to be hardware locked to
> ONLY run their software.
> On Oct 3, 2016, at 5:39 PM, Jay R. Ashworth wrote:
>
> You're not familiar with CPSC mandatory recalls, are you?
I'm not sure how you could make the case that a compromised DVR, e.g., directly
creates a risk of physical injury to a person. Without that, I don't see how
the CPSA would apply
This is where device profiles could help. If enough devices register
profiles with the local router, at some point the router's default
could be closed, so devices with no profile can't talk to the outside.
That would be nice, but a manufacturer who can't be bothered to take even
the most basi
But that does not remove those devices from the network.
That ship has sailed.
In thinking over the last DDos involving IoT devices, I think we don't have a
good technical solution to the problem. Cutting off people with defective
devices they they don't understand, and have little control over, is an
action that makes sense, but hurts the innocent. "Hey, Grandma, did yo
> On Oct 1, 2016, at 8:37 PM, Hugo Slabbert wrote:
>
> So, kudos, Rogers Wireless!
This has also been live on Roger's Fido sub-brand for a while now, too.
2605:8d80:484:: is live in Vancouver.
--lyndon
> On Aug 31, 2016, at 6:36 PM, Matt Palmer wrote:
>
> Thanks, Netscape. Great ecosystem you built.
Nobody at that time had a clue how this environment was going to scale, let
alone what the wide-ranging security issues would be.
And where were you back then, not saving us from our erroneous
Is there a Yahoo MTA admin listening who can help diagnose what might be a
network ACL block to one of our SMTP server subnets?
Thanks,
--lyndon
> In other words, it's not just Netflix that has this problem...
No, it's Netflix that has the problem. Audible actually gives a fuck about
their customers.
> 1. C-band teleport in Singapore with SingTel IPs, remote terminals in
> Afghanistan.
>
> 2. Ku-band teleport in Germany with IP space in an Intelsat /20, remote
> terminal on the roof of a US government diplomatic facility in
> $DEVELOPING_COUNTRY
>
> 3. Teleports in Miami with IP space that lo
> On Jun 3, 2016, at 4:59 PM, jim deleskie wrote:
>
> I don't suspect many folks that are outside of this list would likely have
> any idea how to set up a v6 tunnel. Those of us on the list, likely have a
> much greater ability to influence v6 adoption or not via day job
> deployments then Net
[...] but I would also have doubts over running anything business
critical on a RP2.
We use them as reverse terminal servers, for dhcp/tftp bootstrapping other
machines, and soon, NTP. They are absolutely rock solid. There's
something to be said for "no moving parts inside."
--lyndon
> On May 11, 2016, at 5:42 PM, Scott Weeks wrote:
>
> Wouldn't the buffers empty in a FIFO manner?
They will empty in whatever order the implementation decides to write them.
But what's more important is the order in which the incoming packets are
presented to the syslogd process. If you're l
I'd get something like a 1U ATOM server ($120 eBay) with small SSD
($18). Runup your favorite FOSS OS, and conserver. For more than the
single real serialport, you can most likely fit a USB hub inside
the case still, and hang a number of USB serial dongles off.
We use Raspberry Pi 2s with sing
Are any of you pushing MACsec (802.1AE) out from your switches to the edge
hosts? Vs. just running it on the network cross-connect fabric?
We have a scenario where, if we could MACsec encrypt those (switch <-> host)
links, we could eliminate a lot of application level TLS. But searching for a
On Dec 3, 2015, at 9:14 PM, Lyndon Nerenberg wrote:
> I should also mention that, despite their bluster, they can't keep it up for
> more than half an hour.
The mailing list has been quiet. All step forward who are scared to say "me
too" on account of Armada.
--ly
On Dec 3, 2015, at 6:28 PM, Lyndon Nerenberg wrote:
> Are we perhaps, finally, reaching the cusp where everyone has realized that
> if we all, collectively, tell the rodents to f*** off, they just might?
I should also mention that, despite their bluster, they can't keep it up for
Typically, businesses hide from admitting they've been hit by drive-by attacks
like Armada is trying to pull off. It has been interesting to see the public
reaction from the post-Protonmail targets, many of whom are being very visible
about 1) admitting they have been hit by the attacks, and 2)
On Dec 3, 2015, at 5:00 PM, alvin nanog wrote:
> run tcpdump and/or etherreal to capture the DDoS attacks
Of course! If we had only thought of this sooner!
:-)
--lyndon
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Afaik, the DDoS is "only" a UDP based one (or much of the attack), you should
be able to mitigate
some to much of the damage caused by filled pipes by blocking incomming UDP
trafic at your ISP level.
This is the Armada Collective, based on the description. We just went
through a round with t
On Jul 14, 2015, at 7:26 PM, valdis.kletni...@vt.edu wrote:
> But.. But... How does that work without using UPNP? :)
SHOUT LOUDER!
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On Jul 14, 2015, at 11:56 AM, Tony Hain wrote:
> IPv6 is not the last protocol known to mankind. IF it burns out in 400-500
> years, something will have gone terribly wrong, because newer ideas about
> networking will have been squashed along the way. 64 bits for both hosts and
> routing was ove
On Jul 14, 2015, at 6:33 PM, Curtis Maurand wrote:
> Since IPV6 does not have NAT, it's going to be difficult for the layman to
> understand their firewall. deployment of ipv4 is pretty simple. ipv6 on the
> otherhand is pretty difficult at the network level. yes, all the clients get
> eve
For a bit of fun, the results after 30 minutes of https://orthanc.ca/figure-1
being out on the nanog list:
IPv4: 315
IPv6: 22
This is strictly GETs on the target page, not tainted by CSS or favicon
nonsense.
I don't know what this says about the proclivity of Nanog readers to blindly
cl
On Jul 13, 2015, at 1:57 PM, Mel Beckman wrote:
> David,
> Did you consider running an IPv6 tunnel through HE.net?
Tunnels work, but they really are getting old. I have run 3ffe:: 6bone, HE
tunnels, and (currently) aiccu. They all work very reliably, and I have
immense gratitude towards the
I've been poking around looking for an inexpensive xDSL circuit tester to do
some measurements on my home DSL line, in opposition to the telco. $2K+ is not
in the budget, so I'm curious about the accuracy of the $300 Chinese units
kicking around eBay (e.g. the ST332B). Anyone out there have exp
On Jun 27, 2015, at 5:35 AM, Rafael Possamai wrote:
> How long do you think it will take to completely get rid of IPv4? Or is it
> even going to happen at all?
IPX ruled the roost, very popularly, for a little while. How long did it take
to die? Why did it die? What were the triggers that pu
On Jun 22, 2015, at 5:27 PM, Scott Weeks wrote:
> I do SSH over geostationary satellite links (C-band) all
> the time. I'd say it's slow, but not excruciating, unless
> you type really fast on the network device's CLI. :-)
SSH client/server authors would do well to learn the lessons of telnet
> What problem do you expect this to solve? This is a real question,
> since you can be 100% sure that any DMARC policy will wreak havoc on
> any of your users who use mailing lists like this one.
*Any* mailing list.
Please help stamp out this abomination by refusing to capitulate to its insane
On Jun 11, 2015, at 9:06 PM, Karl Auer wrote:
>> You don't get to just say "I'm not going to implement this because I don't
>> agree with it," which is what Google is doing in the case of Android.
>
> Actually, you DO get to just say that. Anyone can, but especially
> something as big as Google
On Jun 10, 2015, at 8:39 PM, Stephen Satchell wrote:
> After the phone screen, the company called me in for the face-to-face
> "interview". I put the word "interview" in quotes because, for 25 minutes,
> the chief programmer of the place played a video game he wrote. That was the
> extent of
On Jun 10, 2015, at 11:18 AM, goe...@anime.net wrote:
> Indeed, the interview process is a two way street. Lets you evaluate who you
> would be working for -- or if you really would want to.
I wrote most of a very long follow-up to this. But what it boils down to is:
+10,000
For all of you s
Where is Mr. Protocol? When we need him most?!
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On Feb 28, 2015, at 7:17 PM, Barry Shein wrote:
> I remember when downloading still images (dial-up days) was considered
> bandwidth hogging and only something very few people did. Of course no
> one did it, it took minutes to download even a rather small image and
> there was little market for
> In my part of the world, a well-known service provider runs FTTC and
> then runs VDSL into the home. Ummh...
I live in a 3rd word country. Oh Canada!
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On Feb 28, 2015, at 5:24 PM, Stephen Satchell wrote:
> (N.B.: "we forced long TTLs to reduce the traffic necessary across our
> peering points." At one point, the cable people said they had one,
> count 'em one, peering link at 44 megabits/s, to serve all cable
> companies [with their own inter
On Feb 28, 2015, at 4:37 PM, Jack Bates wrote:
> The question is, if YOU paid for the fiber to be run to their ped, would they
> hook you up?
No. But that's because they are using the fibre pedestals to deliver a high
bandwidth DSL service. The condo customers still get DSLon copper, but be
> It's not about "that's all they need", "that's all they want", etc.
Whenever any vendor spouts "this is what our customers want" you know they are
talking pure bullshit. The only customers who know what they "want" are the
microscopic percentage who know what's actually possible, and we are d
I'm running into TLS interoperability problems with some of the SMTP
servers under the inbound.protection.outlook.com domain. Are there any
Outlook postmasters lurking here that could contact me off list to help
debug this?
Thanks,
--lyndon
On Nov 23, 2014, at 8:51 PM, Randy Bush wrote:
> and what tasty things did the hijacker's web site serve?
Firefox on my Mac started acting very strangely after encountering one of the
'unresponsive' versions of craigslist.ca. Apparent browser hangs, javascript
script timeouts, and odd things
On Nov 23, 2014, at 7:41 PM, Brian Henson wrote:
> Is anyone else seeing their local craigslist redirected to another site
> other than craigslist? I see it loading http://digitalgangster.com/5um.
*.craigslist.ca and *.craigslist.org have been offline since about 16:40
Pacific Standard Time fr
On Nov 10, 2014, at 4:24 PM, Izaac wrote:
> If you're stuck working in a completely isolated environment, then work it
> into the contract. That's the cost of being on an island.
This is the argument being made against all the citizens who have the temerity
to live in British Columbia, yet no
On Aug 18, 2014, at 3:05 PM, Randy Bush wrote:
> the request message was a forge, see below. damned shame i did not
> think of it, though. otoh, i consider the contact requests useful.
You just blew an opportunity to get on every north american late night talk
show.
Oh ... (sorry)
signatu
On Jul 14, 2014, at 5:39 PM, Matt Palmer wrote:
> I assume that there's a leopard involved there somewhere?
It's noodling around in the disused lavatory with Moaning Myrtle.
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On Jun 20, 2014, at 6:24 AM, Jacques Latour wrote:
> Just as an indicator, we have 316 .ca domains with IPv6 glue records :-(
Part of the problem might be that two of the bigger registrars (Webnames and
easyDNS) *still* can't handle input of IPv6 addresses in their management
panels - you hav
On Feb 16, 2014, at 8:30 PM, Christopher Morrow wrote:
> and good luck with figuring out:
> 1) when you need to re-do that magic move
> 2) making sure that the move is automatable over time
I was suggesting it as an alternative to just chopping off NTP at your border.
Presumably it would be
On Feb 16, 2014, at 7:59 PM, Mark Tinka wrote:
> Juniper's Junos implementation (which is based on FreeBSD)
> hasn't been patched
>
> Using firewall filters is the only way to mitigate the
> vulnerability.
But doesn't the JunOS ntpd read/parse ntpd.conf? It's worth getting to the
admin mod
On Nov 1, 2013, at 7:18 PM, Mike Lyon wrote:
> So even if Goog or Yahoo encrypt their data between DCs, what stops
> the NSA from decrypting that data? Or would it be done simply to make
> their lives a bit more of a PiTA to get the data they want?
Markhov chain text generators are cheap. Rath
On 2013-06-25, at 8:54 PM, Jason Hellenthal wrote:
> Anyone got a pentagram packet and a weje board ?
Be careful, when you pull out the chalk to draw a pentaGRAM around your data
centre, that you don't – accidentally – draw a pentaGONE.
On 2013-06-25, at 8:24 PM, "Caruso, Anthony" wrote:
> Yes, if you can identify the source of the grains, you know origin and flight
> path prior to your lawn. NSA approach's is getting the pigeon shit off of
> everyone's lawn...
Then I am in favour of PRISM. NSA: come vacuum all the pigeon
On 2013-06-25, at 7:58 PM, Sean Donelan wrote:
> The memo provides an overview and principles regarding Lawful Intercept(LI)
> of networks using RFC 1149, "A Standard for the Transmission of IP Datagrams
> on Avian Carriers." National requirements are not addressed.
Is scooping pigeon shit o
On 2012-12-20, at 12:13 PM, Michael Thomas wrote:
> Do these
> things need to have gig-e speeds? Probably not... for a lot even Bluetooth
> speeds
> are probably fine. But they do want to be really small and really inexpensive.
Then run RS-422 or RS-485 over a single twisted pair. You don't ev
On 2012-10-14, at 14:56 PM, Matthias Waehlisch wrote:
> do you mean http://conferences.sigcomm.org/imc/2007/papers/imc122.pdf
> ?
That's the one!
> I'm looking for innovative ideas on how to find such a rogue device,
> ideally as soon as it is plugged in to the network.
There was a SIGCOMM paper a few years back that described a scheme based on
measuring the the ACK delays of TCP sessions. In a nutshell, you can detect
nodes on the wirele
On 2012-08-24, at 10:33 AM, valdis.kletni...@vt.edu wrote:
> If you can use 3ms to extract enough money out of the market to pay for a
> cable, that market is *way* too volatile in the first place.
Heh. Think things are volatile now? Wait 'til they get it down to
pico-payment based trading of
It is far preferable for the merchant to request ID and verify that the
signature matches the ID _AND_ the picture in the ID matches the
customer.
In the late 1990s I had a Visa card from (I think) Citibank that had my
picture embossed on the front of the card. I'm surprised this didn't
catc
On 2012-06-08, at 2:07 PM, Andrew Sullivan wrote:
> I'm not trying to be dismissive. Those are excellent stopgap
> measures. They're not a solution.
There is no "solution." Security is about risk management, nothing more.
The only way to ensure your personal passwords are never compromised i
On 2012-06-08, at 1:41 PM, Michael Thomas wrote:
> I run a website. If it can change it on mine, I'd like to understand
> how it manages to do that.
I log in to your website, change my password, and the software picks up that
I've changed the password and updates the safe accordingly. The soft
On 2012-06-08, at 1:22 PM, Michael Thomas wrote:
> Does your password safe know how to change the password on each
> website every several months?
Yes.
On 2012-06-08, at 1:02 PM, Scott Weeks wrote:
> Only if you have an OS you have to pay for: apple or ms.
I don't pay for them. $WORK pays for them.
If you're complaint is about 1Password not running on your particular operating
systems, then pick a solution that *does* run on your OS. There
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