I run my Pi-Hole on a dedicated Raspberry Pi. I have another Pi that runs my SSH tarpit. These are the only 2 things I keep on separate devices, the rest is containerized on my main server.
Platform | Username |
---|---|
Mastodon | @Andromxda@hachyderm.io |
wiki-user: Andromxda
I run my Pi-Hole on a dedicated Raspberry Pi. I have another Pi that runs my SSH tarpit. These are the only 2 things I keep on separate devices, the rest is containerized on my main server.
You can accomplish the same with dnscrypt-proxy and Orbital Sync for Pi-Hole. You can also run a recursive DNS server using Unbound.
For anyone keeping track of the petition, this website presents the data in a much nicer way than the official European Commission website: https://stopkillinggamestracker.pages.dev/
I have a local instance of Vaultwarden that I use to generate and store the credentials for my local services, and I use normal cloud-hosted Bitwarden for all my other passwords.
You can run Linux on the Switch: https://switchroot.org/
You know what also justifies Valve’s 30% cut? Their outstanding efforts in getting games to run on Linux, and the overall impact that this had on the Linux community.
Keep using FreshRSS, just deploy something like fivefilters-full-text-rss-docker alongside it, to get full text RSS feeds from websites, that don’t provide them. If you don’t want to self-host, there’s morss.it. Chris Titus Tech once made a few videos about this:
https://invidious.fi/watch?v=nxV0CPNeFxY
https://invidious.fi/watch?v=Y1Ho_RrF_9I
Did you use normal chromium or Ungoogled Chromium? I tried it on the Arc Browser (which is based on Chromium), and it worked, but it didn’t work on Ungoogled Chromium.
It’s because of the encryption, any encrypted email provider has this issue, it’s not specific to Proton
SSL is not E2EE
It only works through the Proton Mail Bridge application, which is only available for desktop. That’s because Proton’s end-to-end encryption makes it impossible to access your emails while they are on Proton’s servers via IMAP. They would need to be decrypted on the server, but that would make the entire encryption pointless. The Proton Mail Bridge connects to the server, downloads the encrypted data, decrypts it locally on your PC and locally exposes an IMAP server, which contains your decrypted messages.
Hydroxide was specifically created as a free replacement for the official Proton Mail Bridge, so no, it doesn’t require a subscription
Who gives a fuck whether it’s legal?
Let’s not forget the dozens of big tech companies run by absolute morons that bring products that nobody wants or needs and only stay afloat due to legacy, stealing data & selling it, and/or venture capital.
You just described Twitter/X
I prefer Tailscale Funnel for these kinds of things. NetBird and ZeroTier also work just fine if you don’t want to expose your services to the public.
If you use 9.9.9.9, you should try Mullvad DNS (with adblocking) or AdGuard Public DNS
I recommend lemmy-ansible or the Docker install guide.
According to the roadmap, the project will get open-sourced before the end of 2024, so there is some hope.
https://roadmap.hardcover.app/feature-requests/posts/allow-open-source
I hope they implement ActivityPub, so it can federate with BookWyrm
Why should I use a piece of software that’s controlled by a corporate entity in Russia?