I would say my financial tracking document.
Also a music file I listen to everyday
/boot/vmlinuz-linux
Probably the file describing the firmware of my current keyboard layout.
My daily work notes.
/bin/zsh
mullvad.exe
Probably my KeePass database since it holds the keys to everything else.
Thread over.
Same for me
Yup, Vaultwarden database. Not much else comes close.
Indirectly, but the
.bash_aliases
file that has all my terminal shortcutsI don’t have this problem because I use Windows snorts
Why not use fish though?
Sad blub
Op’s password.
It’s
hunter2
, isn’t it?I thought it was the same as his luggage, 12345?
Dammit, I knew
69
was gonna get me in trouble one-uh-these-days
.git/objects/pack/pack-1c6f43d5481532f5aea93cff2884e100a36dc8f3.pack
passwords.kdbx
cinnamon-desktop
.profile
firefox
It was my Bitcoin wallet before I sold. Now it’s probably my password vault.
/home/user/.mozilla/firefox/nkhyqhk8.default
My most important file is an insanely customized, self-compiled binary on Gentoo, embedded with multiple layers of encrypted payloads—using a hybrid of AES-256 and RSA, stored in a hidden LUKS partition on a remote server. The entire setup is wrapped in a fortress of security-hardened CFLAGS, with each layer only accessible via a complex, time-sensitive keystroke sequence using a YubiKey. The system is so finely tuned that it only runs on a specific kernel version optimized for speed and stealth, pivoting through an ever-shifting network of proxy chains. If anyone tries to tamper with it, the dead man’s switch wipes everything in an instant. Good luck finding it OP.
If you used Lemmy on your phone, then your IP is already exposed.
I have a triangular file I use for sharpening all my saws, super useful. I have some old saws.
Password database. I don’t know any of my passwords.
Edit: Except one of course.
But I’ll never tell 😉