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Hostsailor experience - wants my root password
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In the customer's defense, they'd like it to be available for installation at their convenience, whenever they're ready to do so
I think it's more that we're aware of the realities of moving in this space. Surely we've all dealt with this flavor of support, it happens man.
I'd be fucking livid if it happened to me but what do we expect HostSailor to do beyond apologizing and taking steps and offering the customer a token?
Maybe I should have waited too lol
Be nice to have a working iso, So I don't need to go into rescue mode setup swap install qemu then use vnc to install debian where randomly the install would get killed and require multiple attempts with mundanely inputting the same info over and over and hope this time it will finish! And when u did complete some dude udeek deleted ur vps so u have to do it over again!
Can't complain anymore.
Enjoy!
Yea who would.. nice trap
trap
Very elite impossible h4x0ring:
Good luck with that on newer systems using AMD SEV or Intel TDX, where memory encryption blocks this entirely.
And if dm-crypt is enabled, along with the kernel keyring (keyctl), fscrypt, file-based encryption (eCryptfs), and probably several other defensive measures, your very elite h4x0ring won’t work.
No regular VPS uses SEV or TDX.
Your second paragraph is nonsensical. None of the technologies mentioned help a single bit against host system memory access.
Even if you had fancy hardware features like SEV or TDX, on a hostile host system you would additionally require remote attestation on boot.
All in all it's clear you have no idea what you're talking about, considering you consider it "impossible in real life", when 99.99% of VPS in the wild have no chance against an attack from the host system.
Swathi Krishna be like:

Sounds easier just to
apt-get dist-upgradeThink the default image is ext4 or xfs I wanted btrfs.. none of the debian iso's work, The VPS I have in LA at least the Debian 10 does work.
Either way.. it's a real DEEK move to delete someone's VPS without the courtesy of asking 1st if they wanted to proceed with a reinstall.
It's bizarre really, never in all the years have a host just reinstalled my VPS. lol
Considering they're GDPR compliant, legally, they shouldn't be able to do it. If someone catches them doing such things, it can lead to huge legal trouble. They are supposed to notify the VPS owner about any such access.
Please correct me if I'm wrong.
Correct, invasion of privacy is generally not the best course of action to take for anyone doing business, let alone an ethical one, add to that, it's illegal in most countries.
That being said, this seems like an honest mistake/act of impulse (as far as the reinstall, I can see the misunderstanding there). Being swamped with tickets myself, not necessarily support -- I've "assumed" things to move my tasks along, and regretted it afterwards. It happens.
Side rant: Considering there were only a handful of providers that continued past Black Friday and participated in the Christmas / NYE thread -- even throwing in some limited flash sales as well, it's unfortunate to see so many folks try to insist they get more out of it/them. This is the kind of thing that deters providers from participating in the first place.
HostSailor was already getting harassed by folks that wanted the 90% deal from last year. They came pretty damn close to providing the same. Just saying, good on everyone that got what they wanted but this is second thread in 24 hours where I see a member try to get the upper hand with them on deals in "behalf of the community". It's esp off putting to see someone with a day old account start making these demands. Let's try to keep things sustainable so we keep seeing these deals and everyone wins.
Thanks @HostSailor for the deals. Appreciate the support / accommodating to requests too. Loving the service so far. Prem! Commodore deal is a mini-dedi (and a beast of one at the price).
Sure, legally they shouldn't access your data. And pretty much every provider wouldn't want to access your data without your permission. That's exactly why they asked for the root password to begin with - although in this case the problem wasn't the asking, it was that they didn't actually need access at all.
My point was that complaining about it being a security risk is daft. If you're worried about your data being accessed and you don't trust your provider, then you're already screwed. If they wanted to, they could access it. Of course, that's illegal, but that's kind of irrelevant. Withholding your root password doesn't make your data any safer. The thing that's keeping your data safe is that your provider is a good guy.
Somewhere in time the good guy can turn to the dark side. Use the force luke.
Please close this thread @angstrom