MilleniumPelican
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MilleniumPelican1 karma
We have a 7yo rescue who was reclaimed from an absentee owner. He was left with a neighbor for weeks at a time and eventually abandoned, so the neighbor rehomed him. He was very submissive (he'd pee every time I'd pet him), but has mostly normalized over the years. He gets along great with our other dog and most of our cats (he's still afraid of a few).
This 70-lb derpy energetic eternal puppy is absolutely terrified of thunder, fireworks, and...sizzling bacon. He tries to hide under desks, will seek my wife out to go into the bathroom with him about an hour before an approaching storm even reaches us, and he shakes like a sleazy Magic Fingers motel massage bed. Constantly. Same with fireworks and bacon. We've been given trazodone by our vet a few times, but it just doesn't seem to cut it. What else can you recommend? How effective are thunder vests? We'll be getting one soon, as he definitely wants to be plastered up against one or more of us when he's scared. We'd really like to avoid medicating him so much if possible. Thanks!
MilleniumPelican3 karma
As an infosec admin, I have a big problem with "the cloud" in general. I won't use it, personally, and I'm not a fan of it professionally. Why do you think it's a smart idea for me to send all of my passwords over the internet to third-party storage, adding (at least) two additional levels of exposure to attack? Even Microsoft finally had to admit, sort of, that Wifi Sense was a stupid idea.
As ITSEC professionals, we walk the line between security and productivity for a living. Sometimes convenience has to take a back seat to security. I don't believe that people should have access to their important passwords from many devices. I think that a single encrypted storage location is a better solution.
Now, that's just my possibly over-protective opinion. I'm interested in what you can say to win me over.
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