• @[email protected]
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    1071 year ago

    Using .ml was stupid in the first place. No need to try to be a special snowflake by using a sketchy TLD.

    • @Ddhuud
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      451 year ago

      It’s one of the 5 TLD (now 4 I guess) that are free. The others being .tk, .ga, .cf and .gq

      We need free TLDs.

    • @[email protected]
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      161 year ago

      I wonder if it was done on purpose after it came out that the Pentagon had typo’d “.ml” instead of ‘.mil’ and exposed a lot of sensitive emails…

      • @[email protected]
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        191 year ago

        Highly doubtful much of anything majorly sensitive got leaked. Firstly even unclassified DoD emails are encrypted by default. Secondly anything classified isn’t even on a network that can talk to normal email, it’s either 100% point to point encrypted or on an airgapped network. If I hopped on SIPR (DoD Secret-level internet) and emailed a normal email address it simply wouldn’t work.

        • AphoticDev
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          101 year ago

          That doesn’t stop somebody from being an idiot and mentioning something classified in clearnet communications. Never underestimate the power of stupidity.

        • @[email protected]
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          51 year ago

          Ehhhhh, you’re missing the human element. Humans do dumb shit all the time. You can’t stop someone from reading something with their eyeballs, remembering it in their meat brain, and using their sausage fingers to type it back into something unsecured. Odds are still low of course, but I wouldn’t be so confident.