Host your own Tor hidden service!
A super simple guide to spinning up a Tor hidden service. [tl;dr]
Ubuntu 20.04 LTS was used for the making of this guide.
you can install Tor using the following command
Requirements: | |
- Minecraft (Java) 1.14+ | |
- Resource Pack | |
If you are not yet familier with custom fonts, I recommend you watch this video before hand to get the hang of the basics or read the | |
docs by AmberWat: | |
(https://youtube.com/watch?v=-9bjbL1dYAE&feature=share) | |
(https://github.com/AmberWat/NegativeSpaceFont/blob/master/README.md) (Credit to AmberWat for the documentation) | |
Go into your texture pack folder and go to assets/minecraft/font and create a file called default.json, in this file you will put the |
A super simple guide to spinning up a Tor hidden service. [tl;dr]
Ubuntu 20.04 LTS was used for the making of this guide.
you can install Tor using the following command
import socket | |
import asyncio | |
import websockets | |
import time | |
import logging | |
import argparse | |
import threading | |
import sys |
const generateAccesskey = (method, password, ip, port) => { | |
const firstPart = btoa(`${method.toLowerCase()}:${password}`) | |
const secondPart = `${ip}:${port}` | |
const accesskey = `ss://${firstPart}@${secondPart}` | |
return accesskey | |
} |
These are notes while researching a way to convert a browser/website to a stream. This could be used for Facebook Live or for webrecording. TL'DR:
Based on the following guide: https://ericdraken.com/running-xvfb-on-a-shared-host-without-x/
Using the following docker image: https://hub.docker.com/r/lambci/lambda/