I believe in the underlying message (use linux), but doesn’t practically every big company change their privacy policy or tos every 10 minutes.
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I don’t trust any governmental body, probably for the best.
I believe their license (GPLv3) doesn’t permit modifying the source code without releasing it to anyone who asks for it, but realistically, if it’s only code they have written, they won’t sue themself over it.
I’m no licensing expert, but that’s how I see it.
dogs0n@sh.itjust.worksto Technology@lemmy.world•Trying to avoid antitrust suits, Google senior executives told employees to destroy internal messagesEnglish11·5 days agoEither of us deliberately destroy data: locked up.
Company exec does the same: slap on the butt and a $2 fine.
We should all be on the same playing field!
dogs0n@sh.itjust.worksto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•finally got static IP from a new ISPEnglish1·6 days agoHosting on your own hardware is much more fun though! In most cases it’s safer too, you don’t really need to worry about much as long as you dont portforward your ssh port & don’t run programs as root.
I would say it’s cheaper as well, but that depends on how expensive the static ip lease is per month.
The internet is full of bots pounding at your machines to get in. It is only a matter of time until the breach Jellyfin.
If you are talking about brute force attacks for your password, then use a good password… and something like fail2ban to block ips that are spamming you.
This point doesn’t exactly match, but: public services like google auth don’t require users use vpns. They have a lot more money to keep stuff secure, but you may see my point… auth isn’t too trivial of a feature to keep secure nowadays. They implement similar protections, something to block spammers and make users have good passwords (if you dont use a good password, you are still vulnerable on any service).
the only thing I miss is the big preview window in the file manager
I may be misinterpreting you, but I think this is a thing with Dolphin. It has a preview pane, which supports all the file types I commonly interact with (F11), which can be dragged to resize bigger or smaller.
I haven’t used any preview thing on Windows, which is why I think I may be misunderstanding.
Anyways if you haven’t tried Dolphin, maybe it has a solution for you (made by kde project, but I believe it should be installable for any desktop environment).
I don’t think a vpn and mail providers can relate in this scenario.
I have heard in the past that authorities have forced (possibly proton, but I forget) to basically wiretap incoming mail before proton can encrypt it for storage on the users account (because pretty much no one sends encrypted mail in a way that only the receiver can read it).
The only data other than that, that they store is ip logs (when forced to, I believe) and recovery email addresses. They are not able to present existing encrypted mail to authorities (from before a wiretap).
This seems overblown, I don’t think theres more they can do. Users have to start sending encrypted mail from their inbox, then the wiretapping won’t be an issue (proton address to proton address can work like this I think).
Them dropping sms took away a big carrot for adoption though.
Still miss that feature everytime I get an SMS or have to send an sms if data isn’t working.
Not everyone can do this but I just deleted those other apps and only had signal, which forced ppl to use it to contact me.
That article is stupid. Any company that receives a “legally binding order” has to comply with it… what would you expect?
Most companies aren’t going to commit a crime to protect a user (like that one dude who ran an email service and destroyed it when he was required to hand over data, forgot his name!!!). If they did, they’d be out of business…
(The article isn’t exactly dumb, but it doesn’t address this properly in my opinion. The outrage over it seems dumb to me. The government will force companies to do whatever it wants, be mad at the gov not the corpo in this case when its to apprehend a journalist or whatever… i understand if its a terrorist or similar, but this specific case may be more poopy om the gov behalf)
Not sure why people care so much, the individual can think whatever he wants, it hasn’t stopped proton from continuing on its good path (even though I don’t use them much nowadays, they are a great service with a respectable free tier).
dogs0n@sh.itjust.worksto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•What are some FOSS programs that are objectively better than their proprietary counterparts?11·13 days agoaverage user doesn’t even know what a port number or IP address is
They don’t need to, just give them a url, username and password and let them type each for each field.
(If you mean because you want them to configure a vpn to access your jellyfin instance, then just expose it to the internet and skip that, which surely you pretty much have to do for your plex instance)
Cost:Convenience
Do people really think this or will they think (like everyone i know) that it’s free and I can watch what I want.
dogs0n@sh.itjust.worksto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Nextcloud (PHP) vs OpenCloud (Go)English2·17 days agoThanks for your reply, I will definitely keep that in mind if Seafile fails to meet any critera moving on, but yeah your last point is also right, it would probably be a big pain to migrate out at this point with all my data for multiple users here.
It seems a lot has been modernising recently, I didn’t know they were also using Go, but hopefully they continue with it for new code.
$202.50
or
$5
dogs0n@sh.itjust.worksto Piracy: ꜱᴀɪʟ ᴛʜᴇ ʜɪɢʜ ꜱᴇᴀꜱ@lemmy.dbzer0.com•Tribler - Is it any good? If not, is there anything as private as Tor for torrents?English7·19 days agoThe problem is that content rights holders setup bots that track who is torrenting media that they own (all the peers they can connect to).
Then they use your ip to ask your ISP to stop you.
As far as i am aware (and possibly wrong), magnet links aren’t any more secure than using a .torrent file, it’s just another form of it that can be easily clicked (or copied) to open in your client (i’ve never looked but it might just be a link containing the info that would be in the torrent file).
dogs0n@sh.itjust.worksto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Nextcloud (PHP) vs OpenCloud (Go)English4·20 days agoNextCloud being so slow forced me to migrate to Seafile.
Seafile being less one-stop-shoppy made me not use it so much, but whenever I do it is always fast and responsive (unlike nextcloud, where 80% of the time I was looking at the loading indicator). Looking it up now though, it looks like it has a lot of new features I haven’t yet tried so I’m probably gonna start using it more now.
Only downside with Seafile is it’s deduplication (for me), because it stops me from easily accessing files directly (always gotta use a client). Likely a benefit for most though and I do rarely need to access a file directly on disk, just when I do, it’d be an easy shortcut for whatever I’m doing.
dogs0n@sh.itjust.worksto Piracy: ꜱᴀɪʟ ᴛʜᴇ ʜɪɢʜ ꜱᴇᴀꜱ@lemmy.dbzer0.com•Tribler - Is it any good? If not, is there anything as private as Tor for torrents?English1·20 days agoDepending on where you live, it may not matter if you don’t use a VPN, you could possibly research what usually happens in your area?
Many people never get warnings, others ignore them and nothing happens.
Usually nothing happens because ISPs don’t care if you torrent, it wastes their time and resources when studios/content owners send dmcas (or whatever) and they have to send a warning. I bet the warnings are just automated for most isps so they can mostly ignore them. ISPs also don’t want to punish their customers because then they’ll lose revenue by cutting you off.
(The ignoring part is heresay, i’m just combining info i’ve heard over the years and experience)
Some (most?) countries it’s not illegal to torrent copyrighted content either, unless you distribute it (seed).
dogs0n@sh.itjust.worksto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What were you surprised to learn wasn't actually normal?2·20 days agoPoopin every morning with your morning coffee (as seen on tv) is a weakness. Be proud!
The recent duckduckgo ad campaign will surely help rescue googlers and so does my mission to ensure everyone I know doesn’t use google search.