I hereby claim:
- I am ianonymous3000 on github.
- I am ianonymous3000 (https://keybase.io/ianonymous3000) on keybase.
- I have a public key ASBibt9LNoIOP28IKxVKlVvZTKAlo8rL-ll5iq2o5hwRlwo
To claim this, I am signing this object:
| #include "chess.h" | |
| Square::Square() | |
| { | |
| piece = EMPTY; | |
| color = NONE; | |
| } | |
| void Square::setSpace(Square* space) |
I hereby claim:
To claim this, I am signing this object:
Privacy marketing has evolved into an entire ecosystem of influencer endorsements and buzzwords—think “military-grade encryption” and “complete anonymity.” Yet these glossy claims often obscure the technical realities of what VPNs can and cannot do.
Even so-called “no logs” policies demand more than marketing pages to be credible; you need verifiable audits and technical documentation.
A breach in your password manager could be catastrophic, so securing it is non-negotiable. This guide covers the essentials and some pro-level tricks to make your account a fortress. Let’s dive in!
Your master password is the linchpin of your Bitwarden security. If it falls, everything does—so let's make it unbreakable.