Wednesday, October 24, 2018
so...on that case...lif you're already working in pool...you already have cloned vlan...so...its transfering the codec signal.(???!) ..to ur connection...ok...then the objectiv is to hide my ass channel on my vlan...and write and read and modify on yours
yeah...
COMMUNITY.CISCO.COM
dear sir, We tried to delete off vlan 250 on the network by conf t --> no inter vlan 250 and no vlan 250 . However we did a show vlan counters as below, we still saw the vlan 250 is there. But with show vlan, we won't saw vlan 250 there. Vlan 250 is not needed in the network, some time it will autom...
Tuesday, October 23, 2018
So, "system" about sending this to Erdogan...I was thinking...if behind this, was turkey national bank, which the CEO, is Trump's finantial adviser at Turkey....would it matter...Israel?
The Biggest Sanctions-Evasion Scheme in Recent History
Yesterday, Turkish banker Mehmet Hakan Atilla was found guilty in a Manhattan courtroom for a range of financial crimes. His dramatic trial revealed that tens of billions in dollars and gold moved from Turkey to Iran through a complex network of businesses, banks, and front companies.
The trial was a long time coming. In late October of 2016, Justice Department officials paid a visit to the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, the Washington-based think tank where I serve as senior vice president. They wanted to talk about Reza Zarrab. A dual Iranian-Turkish national, Zarrab was the swashbuckling gold trader who had helped Iran evade sanctions with the help of Turkish banks in 2013 and 2014, yielding Iran an estimated $13 billion at the height of the efforts to thwart Tehran’s nuclear ambitions. A leaked reportby prosecutors in Istanbul in March 2014 suggested that Zarrab spearheaded a second sanctions-busting scheme involving fake invoices for billions more in fictitious humanitarian shipments to Iran that were processed through Turkish banks.
At FDD, we’d spent considerable time digging into Zarrab’s activities. Our think tank already had an established track record of identifying and exposing Iran’s malign activities. We had also just launched a new program to explore Turkey’s recent drift into Islamist authoritarianism. The more we investigated, the more we realized that Zarrab’s schemes, which could have helped Iran pocket more than $100 billion, rank among the largest sanctions evasion episode in modern history
let's try this....
I’m running a webserver and FTP server, wherein /var/www is bound to /home/user/www.
I set both directories to chmod 777 (which is fine since it’s for testing only).
I can upload files into /home/user/www, but whenever I create a new directory, I always have to run chmod 777 on that folder.
Otherwise, when I try to browse it, I get the error message
You don't have permission to access /test/ on this server.
Is there a way I could make all sub-folders inside /var/www be accessible by anyone? Or could their permissions be automatically set to 777? It’s annoying that I have to type chmod 777 every time.
I set both directories to chmod 777 (which is fine since it’s for testing only).
I can upload files into /home/user/www, but whenever I create a new directory, I always have to run chmod 777 on that folder.
Otherwise, when I try to browse it, I get the error message
You don't have permission to access /test/ on this server.
Is there a way I could make all sub-folders inside /var/www be accessible by anyone? Or could their permissions be automatically set to 777? It’s annoying that I have to type chmod 777 every time.
ASKUBUNTU.COM
I’m running a webserver and FTP server, wherein /var/www is bound to /home/user/www. I set both directories to chmod 777 (which is fine since it’s for…
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