> your security /virus protections could become compromised?
If the 'security' software is that easy to break, it isn't worth having anyhow.
> your security /virus protections could become compromised?
If the 'security' software is that easy to break, it isn't worth having anyhow.
>Then having to alter your machine with something that may or may not be risky
Do you remember every phone number by heart and never write it down or store it in a contact list?
>Quit being a nigger.
Why is the phone directory not directing properly? Is that your question?
>Computers are (for the most part) unable to talk directly to each other “face to face” as people do. When computers talk to each other they usually do it via a network. Network communication is analogous to a telephone call.
>To call a person you probably already know their name (or their company name), but you probably can’t keep all the phone numbers in your head, and so you’ll use a phonebook or telephone directory to look up their name and thus find their phone number. This is basically what DNS does – computer name to network address lookup.
>For a telephone system to work, every person or company needs to have a unique phone number so that the telephone exchanges can route the call. The same is true for computers, they all have to have unique network addresses, usually using a protocol called Internet Protocol (IP). IP version 4 addresses take the form of four digits separated by dots, and each digit ranges from 0 to 255. This gives roughly 4.3 billion addresses. A newer version of IP, version 6, is slowly being introduced which allows for 340 trillion, trillion, trillion addresses.
>When you see an address such as rcmtech.co.uk this is like a person’s name. When you ask your computer to talk to that name, it has to get the numeric network address before it can communicate, so it does a DNS lookup. DNS returns the numeric address and your computer then uses this to communicate. DNS is one of the “under the hood” internet technologies that usually “just works”.
https://itanalogies.wordpress.com/2015/01/05/dns-is-like-a-phonebook/
https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc1034.txt
https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc1035.txt
Run along jr.
>i can guarantee you that it is not some random phone number i got off 4chan or 8 kun
Do you trace route the ip each time you load the page to ensure it's resolving to the IP you KNOW to be 'good' and ensure your traffic is properly routed? What is the CORRECT trusted IP good anon sir? Share your wisdom with us so that we may all be enlightened.
195.2.76.245
^ is this IP the correct ip for the media server?
Hostname:
>v757003.hosted-by-vdsina.ru
>https://whatismyipaddress.com/ip/195.2.76.245
Surely at this point you MUST be a vetted employee with vdsina… right?
>https://vdsina.ru/
>Random calls are only pinging your phone.
They like to sell me spam & health insurance. Fun times.
NP anon! Hopefully you're back to yuckin' up the board with images & anons. o7
>cache:
>: a computer memory with very short access time used for storage of frequently or recently used instructions or data
Could reboot or wait out the TTL before it refreshes. Manually flushing just ensures you're starting fresh is all.
https://www.lifewire.com/what-is-a-dns-cache-817514