It's what I've experienced at FAANG companies. MitM isn't used and would break certificate pinning on sites (including internal tools) that use both certificate pinning and HSTS. The Chromium source code has a list of domains that are hard-coded to only accept particular root certificates.
dan
Larger companies that monitor for corporate passwords being entered on third-party sites usually use a browser extension that's force-installed using Chrome Enterprise. That's especially the case if they mandate the usage of Chrome.
Hong Kong to Los Angeles is around 70ms latency (140ms round trip) so I'm not too surprised.
It's not uncommon on sites where a high proportion of the userbase uses an adblocker, as making ads look like and render using the same code as organic content (same CSS classes, etc) makes them harder to block.
Wow, this is very useful!!
a program that runs as root
Does it have to run as root? It's common to run Docker in rootless mode in production environments.
You might be interested in StirlingPDF too.
Maybe I shouldn't have included that in my comment, but my point about trying to ban kids from doing stuff being ineffective still stands.
even if 10% of kids get around the ban somehow, the fact that 90% don't removes a huge part of the social in social network
The kids that get around the ban will spread that knowledge to others. That's what happened when I went to school, and I don't think it's any different today.
~~Parents should be doing a better job parenting, rather than relying on the state to do it for them.~~
Also, when has banning kids from doing something actually stopped them from doing it? Even "back in my day", using a proxy to bypass blocked sites was common knowledge amongst the smarter kids. The tech savvy kids would host their own proxies using a free web hosting service and PHProxy (or similar software). These days, it's much easier to use a VPN or proxy.
It's still just a proposal, but Trump has a habit of doing things regardless of the legality.
Yes! I'm not sure about it changing when you connect monitors (since I'm usually using desktop PCs), but you can have a different setup per monitor.
I have three monitors at work. My main monitor is configured to show all open apps in the taskbar, while the secondary monitors only show the apps opened on those monitors. You can totally change any of the configuration though... the layout, the position, the settings, or even just not have a taskbar on some monitors.