Do private domains names really hide owner information? [closed] - networking

Closed. This question does not meet Stack Overflow guidelines. It is not currently accepting answers.
This question does not appear to be about programming within the scope defined in the help center.
Closed 8 years ago.
Improve this question
I want to register a domain name in order to do political activism. I want to hide my personal information from being displayed. For that I'm considering registering a provide domain from a website like godaddy.com
My question: how safe is that? Can anyone access the private personal information of the owner of the domain?

According to arin your contact information will be availble in customer records but not to Whois users. If somebody gets access to the customer records then they can access your contact information. Whether this can happen depends on service provider policies and also dpends on the laws of the country where your service provider is situated.

You can use privacyprotect.org
for free to hide your contact information. read on the link for more info on how it works and how safe it is.

Related

Disposable email address given to third parties? [closed]

Closed. This question does not meet Stack Overflow guidelines. It is not currently accepting answers.
This question does not appear to be about a specific programming problem, a software algorithm, or software tools primarily used by programmers. If you believe the question would be on-topic on another Stack Exchange site, you can leave a comment to explain where the question may be able to be answered.
Closed 8 months ago.
Improve this question
Currently google single sign-on gives your real email address to everyone. Instead it could give each party a different identifier for you, such that these third parties wouldn't be able to correlate your data.
Moreover spam could be more easily identified and stopped. Google could manage a fleet of "salted" email addresses for each user, tracking which third parties send spam. Signin/gmail synergy.
My question: Does this exist already? Why does this not already exist? Do any other auth vendors do this?
Followup: Why is my email address even used as my primary id? I'd rather keep it private.
Your email is not used as a primary identifier at least not by Google. When a website such as Airbnb does an open ID connect dance with Google, Google replies with a unique identifier to Airbnb. That identifier does not mean anything to Airbnb as to what your email first name last name are. What also happens is that Airbnb can ask Google for your email and that is how they end up having your email.
Note that Apple have a privacy preserving mechanism where instead of returning your real email address they will return an Apple email address that points to your email. That gives you one level of indirection and more privacy.

Send content over the network to client without client being able to extract the content to their local machine [closed]

Closed. This question needs details or clarity. It is not currently accepting answers.
Want to improve this question? Add details and clarify the problem by editing this post.
Closed 3 years ago.
Improve this question
Is it possible to send content over the network to client without client being able to extract the content to their local machine?
I mean what if someone decides to sell media content using browsers, then once someone gets hold of the content he or she is able to go to Chrome Inspect - Network and just download the content to their local machine, which would enable them to spread the content for free later on (while initially the access to the content was provided just for someone who is authenticated for the site serving the content and paid for the content).
Are there any headers maybe which would prohibit doing so?
You're asking how to do effective DRM, which is well-known to be impossible. Think about it from this perspective: if what you're describing were possible, Hollywood would do it and there'd be no such thing as movie piracy.

How to know what company protect a website? [closed]

Closed. This question needs to be more focused. It is not currently accepting answers.
Want to improve this question? Update the question so it focuses on one problem only by editing this post.
Closed 3 years ago.
Improve this question
https://www.genecards.org is protected by cloudflare. But this is not clear from the HTML webpages on genecards.org. Is there a systematically to figure out this kind of information for a number of websites? Thanks.
Short of triggering a Cloudflare bot challenge, you can try to tell the public-facing CDN/WAF/some of the anti-bot services as follows:
Do an NS lookup and look for either what nameserver/DNS hosting provider they use (often for Cloudflare customers it's *.ns.cloudflare.com), or what IP's that name resolves to. Both methods are not 100% reliable because that could be only an outer, public-facing layer and inside there could be a non-public facing WAF. IPs can also change. But it's a start.
In this case, for genecards.org it's actually showing not Cloudflare but Imperva Incapsula CDN as the outer layer, based on the IP addresses genecards.org resolves to. A quick check on builtwith in the "CDN" section confirms that.

openldap set single user password to never expire [closed]

Closed. This question does not meet Stack Overflow guidelines. It is not currently accepting answers.
This question does not appear to be about a specific programming problem, a software algorithm, or software tools primarily used by programmers. If you believe the question would be on-topic on another Stack Exchange site, you can leave a comment to explain where the question may be able to be answered.
Closed 8 years ago.
Improve this question
is it possible to use ldapmodify to set a single users password to never expire?
for example I have a system user that causes the system to fail if the password expires so I need to make it never expire while all the other user password do expire.
so here is what I did created a second password policy and then modified the Manager user to use the new policy rather than the default policy. see http://www.zytrax.com/books/ldap/ch6/ppolicy.html for the details.
Yes. usually. Depends on the system, the OS, etc (usually it's something like putting the pwdMaxAge value to 0 so it never expires . But this if for OpenLDAP itself, it's not necessarilly the same attribute that your target system/OS uses for its own password expiration dates : maybe those are stored elsewhere in ldap for that system/OS...

How can I access blocked Yahoomail in my office? [closed]

Closed. This question is off-topic. It is not currently accepting answers.
Want to improve this question? Update the question so it's on-topic for Stack Overflow.
Closed 10 years ago.
Improve this question
Actually My network administrator blocked the www.yahoomail.com in my office. But i need to access it to read some important mails. Is there any possibilities?
I tried it by some third party website. After entering login credentials (username and password). I got an error "This page requires that you have Javascript enabled on your browser."
But it is already enabled in my browser.
Can anyone help me?
Although you have way to access Yahoomail but I think you should just ask Admin or your teamleader or PM to allow you to use Yahoomail at work.
If you get caught while trying to connect Yahoomail without permision, its gotta be worse :)
You can try to install TOR -> https://www.torproject.org/
It sends your requests over some proxies and so it should help to reached the blocked site.
One of the most commonly used method is to use Proxy server specially the russians one

Resources