So
Filecoin providers are seemingly rejecting my address. Nobody seems to recognise the error.
I'm somewhat confused.
I'm thinking of the hackerspaces list I tried to join once. List software didn't respond to me getting on.
I'm thinking a little of when I was using certificate pinning, and the certificates of websites changed. I wonder if there's a way to see evidence like that again.
Often there are thoughts around having a secure system. But how to keep a system secure when I myself could be the one dissociating and compromising it? Probably over-concerned about this, unsure.
My olimex soc started shuffling its serial console baud on boot, and I got confused why that would ever happen, and stopped pursuing setting it up. I think I ordered a cheap oscilloscope, that sounds helpful. I could also maybe build something oscilloscope-like. I also have an old oscilloscope somewhere, maybe in another state not sure.
That soc used to be my most stable device, but I did leave it in an unlocked empty vehicle for a year or so.
Maybe trying with another small system could help. Just a sense of trust for the system, can go a long way. I'm not sure what system to try.
Here's an idea: I could see if my soc is still shuffling its baud rates. If so, I could try a new OS and see if it behaves the same. At some point, I use it to verify its own gpg signature or something. But even just getting it to a point where it's serial console is reliable sounds quite helpful.
It's probably good to take logs of the conditions of things like that. What's been plugged into the system. What the OS image was plugged into before being placed into the system. Something small that can be used to logically narrow problem sources down.