

It’s weird because Best Picture is usually given to movies that aren’t necessarily entertaining but are artistically interesting. Not sure what is artistically interesting about a romance movie, the genre is just cheesy comfort entertainment
It’s weird because Best Picture is usually given to movies that aren’t necessarily entertaining but are artistically interesting. Not sure what is artistically interesting about a romance movie, the genre is just cheesy comfort entertainment
The site is also important as a key content supplier to other torrent sites though its upload bots. Interestingly, those bots are still operational, unlike during previous downtime periods.
This tells me it’s likely a temporary technical issue
Hopefully 🥺
Awesome thank you!
It’s uptime has been a bit of a roller coaster the past year or so
Remember when Aaron Swartz tried to do something similar and received multiple life sentences
Oh nooooo here I go recording the IP addresses of the sites I visit in case I need to add DNS records to my router oh nooooo
I’m guessing the copies they send to “journalists” have some sort of individualized watermark. Of course that would only fight leakers, not the “journalists” getting hacked
Yet another reminder that piracy on Linux is the way because new files don’t have execute permissions by default
Respectful enough to call it GNU/Linux, but not support it… lmao
Something I’m not understanding is how these payloads even get executed. In “First Stage” in Figure 3, it explains that the user is redirected to a Github repo and then the payload is downloaded, but how exactly does it go to the second stage from there? I would assume the user has to be dumb enough to double-click on the payload that got downloaded, but the article makes it sound like this all happens automatically after clicking the initial ad link