Looks like gitlab now requires account verification for new accounts in addition to email. Either phone number or credit card.
This applies both to accounts created with a working email or by logging in using your github account. You can’t even verify your email until you go through step 1.
I don’t know when this started, but at least for the last month or two judging from these posts in the forums.
- https://forum.gitlab.com/t/how-to-create-an-account-without-telephone-number-if-an-non-activated-account-has-already-been-created-with-the-same-e-mail-address-that-demands-a-phone-number/93675/2
- https://forum.gitlab.com/t/phone-verification-sms-not-received-unable-to-login-and-register/92202
- https://forum.gitlab.com/t/how-to-create-an-account-without-telephone-number-if-an-non-activated-account-has-already-been-created-with-the-same-e-mail-address-that-demands-a-phone-number/93675/2
Fun fact: I don’t even want to host on gitlab, I just wanted to report bugs in some projects. So I’m locked out.
Why isn’t FTP secure
because it hasn’t got an S in it
It’s unencrypted, your ISP / Starbucks wifi can read all the files you send. Use SFTP instead.
or FTPS
What’s the difference?
SFTP is a ‘part’ of SSH, FTPS is FTP but encrypted.
Thanks for the links, interesting reads. From what I gather, SFTP is the more modern and less complicated way of doing it…
Yeah, I think you need to go out of your way to try to use ftps. When people say ftp they generally mean SFTP.
Not just read but modify even.