Nextcloud Notes is pretty good. Btw Joplin has an option for End-to-end encryption.
Nextcloud Notes is pretty good. Btw Joplin has an option for End-to-end encryption.
I’m pretty sure Bitwarden is profitable, about a year ago they even purchased another company: https://bitwarden.com/blog/bitwarden-extends-passwordless-leadership-with-acquisition/
Also, I don’t think they make that much money from individuals. They focus more on businesses, because they pay more and these customers stay around for a long time, they can’t easily switch to a different solution.
Sure, I’ve been a premium customer for years because I find the service very useful, but this community is all about selfhosting.
You can continue using the cloud hosted version of Bitwarden and only use your own instance for file sharing.
You can selfhost Bitwarden/Vaultwarden (which I recommend, since it’s rewritten in Rust and you get all the premium features for free) and use Bitwarden Send. This is probably more secure than most other options.
My company uses Roundcube for Webmail and offers Thunderbird as a native client. It’s always great to see free software in a corporate environment.
Roundcube should work pretty well for you: https://roundcube.net/
I know, I tried OpenWRT on a Pi, but the experience wasn’t great (at least not as a home router).
I am aware of the ME, but I can’t really do anything about it. Current ARM SBCs are not suitable for a router/firewall (at least in my experience). I’m not that concerned about it though.
It might sound ridiculous, but I currently also run a WSUS server to get Windows updates. But I will probably replace my entire Windows setup with a better solution. Since I don’t run Windows bare-metal anymore, I’m looking forward to using offline Windows VMs on my Proxmox host and just accessing the internet directly from my Linux machine.
I was about to suggest that
+1 for ArchiveBox
Yes, typically you get to talk to real lawyers. They may not be the best lawyers on the planet, but if you just need some advice, you should be perfectly fine.
Imagine being American and not even having health insurance
The developer is German, in Germany it’s pretty common to have a Rechtsschutzversicherung. You pay them monthly or yearly and in exchange you can request legal advice from one of their lawyers af any time. It’s pretty neat.
Let’s prove to companies that hostility towards open source can be really bad for them
I haven’t seen such a list. But GitHub maintains a repo at https://github.com/github/dmca with all the DMCA notices they receive. And also, fuck Mazda as well for taking down innocent FOSS projects. Simply for this reason, I’m never buying any of their cars. There are enough other car makers on the market.
Well that’s even worse and it’s the reason we need local, self-hosted open source alternatives like Home Assistant.
I’ve been using Authelia for almost 2 years and I really like it. Never had any issues.