This Coming Gladness
This Coming Gladness is an album by Josephine Foster, released in 2008.
This Coming Gladness | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Studio album by | ||||
Released | July 22, 2008 | |||
Genre | Acid folk, psychedelic rock | |||
Length | 45:21 | |||
Label | Bo'Weavil | |||
Josephine Foster chronology | ||||
|
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | |
Tiny Mix Tapes |
Track listing
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "The Garden of Earthly Delights" | 5:13 |
2. | "The Lap of Your Lust" | 5:35 |
3. | "Lullaby to All" | 3:28 |
4. | "I Love You & the Springtime Blues" | 5:56 |
5. | "All I Wanted Was the Moon" | 5:39 |
6. | "Waltz of Green" | 5:13 |
7. | "Sim Não" | 3:00 |
8. | "Second Sight" | 3:51 |
9. | "A Thimble Full of Milk" | 3:37 |
10. | "Indelible Rainbows" | 3:49 |
gollark: VPNs prevent ISPs from seeing all this except possibly to some extent #3, but the VPN provider can still see it, and obviously whatever service you connect to has any information sent to it.
gollark: Anyway, with HTTPS being a thing basically everywhere and DNS over HTTPS existing, ISPs can only see:- unencrypted traffic from programs/services which don't use HTTPS or TLS- the *domains* you visit (*not* pages, and definitely not their contents, just domains) - DNS over HTTPS doesn't prevent this because as far as I know it's still in plaintext in HTTPS requestts- metadata about your connection/packets/whatever- also the IPs you visit, but the domains are arguably more useful anyway
gollark: On my (GNU/)Linux computing devices, which is all of my non-portable ones, I run dnscrypt-proxy, which acts as a local DNS server which runs my queries through DNS over HTTPS/DNS over TLS/DNSCrypt servers.
gollark: In other news, the first rule of tautology club is the first rule of tautology club.
gollark: Yes, Google is definitionally Google.
References
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.