thegreatsuspender
protocol-specification | thegreatsuspender | |
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4 | 108 | |
- | 5,026 | |
- | - | |
- | 0.0 | |
- | 9 months ago | |
JavaScript | ||
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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protocol-specification
- Login to Cashrain not working. I tap the qr code to open my bitcoin.com wallet. I get a green check mark that remains on the screen unless I press dismiss and then nothing happens. what's the trick here? I wanna make some rain!
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CashAccounts are ready but barely supported - we are lagging behind UnstoppableDomains in this key to mass adoption
Something like https://gitlab.com/cashid/protocol-specification ?
- Coingecko shows BCH as having zero development going on
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Ask HN: What Are You Working On?
[2] https://gitlab.com/cashid/protocol-specification
thegreatsuspender
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The Great Suspender once again contains malware
Happened in (2021)[https://github.com/greatsuspender/thegreatsuspender/issues/1...], and then a few others have forked the extension and tried to revive it, only to eventually sell to nefarious owners or sell user data themselves
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Great suspender contains malware, what to do next?
I went to github and downloaded the last known "good version, installed it manually."
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Things that I wish to that employe
You want someone to die for disabling a potentially malicious extension that is unmantained since 2020?
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How can I recover my suspended tabs from 'The Great Suspender Original'?
Also if you want to read up on the removal of the app and the malware issues this post goes over it as well as other recovery options
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What is your guys' opiniions of UKUI?
Similar code projects have had issues like this before, like the open source Great Suspender.
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People often recommend open source apps for malware free apps. But has there ever been a case where a *popular* open source project was found to be malicious after some time?
What can happen after a project changes hands - https://github.com/greatsuspender/thegreatsuspender/issues/1263
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Rejecting data demands, ExpressVPN removes VPN servers in India
Better link https://github.com/greatsuspender/thegreatsuspender/issues/1...
> TLDR: The old maintainer appears to have sold the extension to parties unknown, who have malicious intent to exploit the users of this extension in advertising fraud, tracking, and more. In v7.1.8 of the extension (published to the web store but NOT to GitHub), arbitrary code was executed from a remote server, which appeared to be used to commit a variety of tracking and fraud actions. After Microsoft removed it from Edge for malware, v7.1.9 was created without this code: that has been the code distributed by the web store since November, and it does not appear to load the compromised script. However, the malicious maintainer remains in control, however, and can introduce an update at any time. It further appears that, while v7.1.9 was what was listed on the store, those who had the hostile v7.1.8 installed did NOT automatically receive the malware-removing update, and continued running the hostile code until Google force-disabled the extension.
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Is the SingleFile extension flagged as high risk by ChromeStats (link), just because of the nature of it saving your page ?
For what it is worth, you may have heard of the Great Suspender incident (https://github.com/greatsuspender/thegreatsuspender/issues/1263). It was used by millions, and was also open source on GitHub, but it could still end up becoming malicious.
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Behold the Android-Windows ecosystem.
Long ass comment: That is not true for the most part. While the increased amount of individuals working of an OSS project may lead to better vulnerability detection according to both parties of the closed-source/proprietary debate, it doesn't lead to a massively more secure software overall. Not all reviewers have the similar experience or expertise and, because of it, not everyone will be able to review, identify or patch any flaws or vulnerability of a specific software since it may require other skills beyond just basic programming skills such as network or cryptographic skills. [1] Some even suggested that the large number of users contributing to the project can lead people "into a false sense of security." [2] Overall, some papers conclude that being an open source software or a proprietary software isn't an important factor for security and suggest considering other factors, such as the particular vendor/maintainer that controls the entire process. [3] After all, what if the maintainer decides to sabotage their own code? What if the project was sold to another maintainer for its own shaddy needs?
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How much RAM does a react developer require in 2021/22?
If you're referring to The Great Suspender, that extension was bought by an advertising company earlier this year. I'm using the last good version (github) though.
What are some alternatives?
iguana - Iguana Bitcoin Cash Debugger
auto-tab-discard - Use native tab discarding method to automatically reduce memory usage of inactive tabs
maplibre-gl-js - MapLibre GL JS - Interactive vector tile maps in WebGL2
thegreatsuspender-notrack - A chrome extension for suspending all tabs to free up memory, privacy-oriented with no analytics tracking.
mint - Non-custodial web-based tool to manage your SLP tokens.
MarvellousSuspender - A chrome extension for suspending all tabs to free up memory, based on the original TGS 7.1.6, without tracking. Find more information about that on https://gioxx.org/tms
bitbox-sdk - BITBOX SDK for Bitcoin Cash
Steam-Economy-Enhancer - Enhances the Steam Inventory and Steam Market.
bounties - A list of the ChainTip bounties available
rnnoise - Recurrent neural network for audio noise reduction
slp-indexer - Bitcoin.com slp-indexer
ffprobe-wasm - A Web-based FFProbe. Powered by FFmpeg, Vue and Web Assembly!