

You should also ask for a copy of the pictures or videos it takes while scanning so you can reference when returning.
You should also ask for a copy of the pictures or videos it takes while scanning so you can reference when returning.
Who’s gonna control the CAs though? Or root dns? there are alternative p2p versions, but I haven’t seen any good ones yet…
I’m currently using forgejo and have no complaints.
Depending on your requirements, you might also consider just using regular git and ssh on a central server somewhere.
Your readme looks super in depth, thanks for that! I haven’t watched the video yet but will later.
I didn’t see it mentioned from a quick glance, but is either sftp or ftps supported?
Have you used jmp.chat before? It looks pretty interesting at first glance
No.
What kind of annoying things are you dealing with?
You don’t have to put the user home in /var/lib either if that helps at all.
If you’re already running rootless, I’d keep doing that unless there’s a really good reason not to.
If it makes you feel better, I’ve dealt with so many servers where someone ran chmod -R 777 / thinking it’d solve all of their permission issues.
Self hosted and open source projects are successful if you enjoy it or are solving something you need. Bonus points if it helps someone else too.
What about Nextcloud? It’s heavier than syncthing, but would be an alternative.
I went through a bunch before settling on Kanboard. If you try kanboard, there are some plugins/themes to make it look nicer.
In the end though, I ended up moving away from it. Would be curious what you end up using!
I really like it. I don’t use it for much, but it’s super easy to have multiple servers in multiple locations and let it take care of replication.
It seemed like it was built more for the self hosting and homelab crowd and not enterprises.
Yep, you can install it directly on the proxmox host too.
Just make sure you test it and also test upgrades so you can avoid having to be on-site for those.
Lemmy is all public. There’s no private timelines, so any 2way block would be superficial anyway right? A blocked user can just log out, or use a different account on a different instance. It’d give people a false sense of security if anyone said bidirectional blocking was a thing.
Something like Twitter could have bidirectional blocking because you can also make all of your posts private.
Who (which single entity) would host this new front page?
Is it a single server? Maybe something like sops is all you need
There’s an oss fork of vault now as well. Openbao.
I forgot about librewolf. Any downsides to it over Firefox?
Any idea how it knows which sites to look through? It’d be cool to have it prefer your own home instance in results.
Without knowing the context… make sure you report people who truly are bullying. Some instances may not do anything, but a lot do care and don’t tolerate bullying and harassment.
Do they publish their protocol or how it works anywhere? Their site didn’t seem to have much technical info at first glance