Does anyone have access to your machine (local or remote)? This sounds every odd.
When DMing me, remember that you have to trust both your server’s admin, as well as mine.
Please use the following age key to encrypt your message (and send me yours, so that I can reply).
age196r7j3hn9dpwsywvlch0ncrvtlx94l2kwyndj733j5vr73dy0vyqa0jgca
Does anyone have access to your machine (local or remote)? This sounds every odd.
While that is true, it does divert peoples’ clicks.
Imagine you wrote a quality tech tutorial blog. Is it ok for OpenAI to take your content, train their models, and divert your previous readers away from your blog?
It’s an open ethical question that it’s not straightforward to answer.
EDIT: yes people also learn things and repost them. But the scale at which ChatGPT operates is unprecedented. We should probably let policy catch up. Otherwise we’ll end up with the mess we currently have by letting Google and Facebook collect data for years without restrictions.
Thanks! I’ll check with my vps provider.
However, this proxy does not seem to be “within” the tor network itself, right? I’m just connecting someone to the first entry node on the system, correct?
Would I be transmitting unencrypted data? In other words, would an outsider be able to tell that I’m transmitting something illegal to a person accessing tor?
Thanks! Would you be able to elaborate a bit more?
It was my understanding that this is not the same thing as running an exit node.
I would imagine dampening how much of a boost old posts get would fix this issue.
There is 0% chance this man is neither on drugs nor having a severe mental breakdown.
He’s not even good at using his puppet.
Interesting, thanks!
I’ve been meaning to host something like this. Tried to do it with wallabag, but couldn’t be arsed to set-up and SMTP server just for the confirmation email.
Honestly? Probably boredom. Computer-related projects are addictive to me.
Haven’t ventured too far, but searxng was my first selfhosted service. It’s very easy, single container, no database.
Yeah I’ve been meaning to look into it.
Just went with pass because it’s what I’m used to, and it’s pretty straightforward. But definitely next on my to-do list.
I manage them using git and stow.
Stow is very useful, but a bit unknown. Hard to explain in a Lemmy post, but basically it helps you manage symlinks between your git repo directory and your $HOME.
You can “install” and “uninstall” configs by managing the symlinks with stow.
Makes sense, the people who have both the tech knowledge and conviction on the advantages of selfhosting, were probably the most active posters.
I use shh keys for all my remote machines, set passwords automatically with ansible, and store them with pass.
https://www.passwordstore.org/
EDIT:
Just to clarify, ansible can use pass as a password store, so in the ansible playbooks you can write which password you want to retrieve from pass.
You can also call pass from any shell script by writing $(pass <target_password>)
You can always compile it, it’s just a single cargo command. 🤷♂️
Good to hear that the government is using it.
Taxpayer-funded activities should run on FOSS when possible, in my opinion.
Wait… Linux desktop is beating Apple in Turkey?
Do students use Linux in schools, or is there an economic reason (i.e. Apple products are too expensive to buy with the current inflation)?
Besides what everyone already said, I would emphasize docker. Just take the plunge and learn it. It will make hosting and keeping things organised much easier.
If you want to go the extra mile, you could have a look into ansible, to make your build reproducible. But it’s probably overkill for now. You’d probably take so long to get anything done that you might lose interest.
Less storage space (since you don’t duplicate the data that has not been changed since the last backup), and ability to check different versions / restore / rollback.
If you don’t mind selfhosting, miniflux is pretty nice.
Really lightweight, downloads the full text if possible (instead of just the first paragraph), etc.