Just one thing, never enter your personal passwords on someone elses computer.
Suzune
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- 105 Comments
Suzune@ani.socialto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Guidance for Noob? (Synching vs Nextcloud, Immich, Tailscale)English
2·23 days agoA domain with DNS access costs around 2€ a year. Just buy your own and generate certificates with Acme.
Suzune@ani.socialto
You Should Know@lemmy.world•YSK about SearXNG - an open metasearch engine
11·23 days agoI only get crap results when using the public SearXNG instances. It’s far better when I use my own container.
I didn’t notice google results are gone. But I also don’t care. If they rely on your metadata to give you results, it’s obvious they are violating privacy.
Suzune@ani.socialto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Finding a private self hosted Google Photos alternative that doesn’t profit from my photosEnglish
21·24 days agoI honestly have no idea if the iOS app works properly.
Suzune@ani.socialto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Finding a private self hosted Google Photos alternative that doesn’t profit from my photosEnglish
4·24 days agoI’ve got Wireguard running. As soon I am on wifi, my phone uploads the new pictures.
Suzune@ani.socialto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Finding a private self hosted Google Photos alternative that doesn’t profit from my photosEnglish
41·24 days agoI tried Photoprism, Ente and Immich.
Immich is by far the best. It has got an app that really does what it should do, has an AI that actually works and is easy to host and to update.
First layer is done by Postscreen (by Postfix). It watches bots misbehaving, check blackhole DNS and disconnects them. Fail2ban takes care of bots who cause errors and warnings in logs and bans them. Third layer is SPF and DKIM. If it does not match, it’s getting flagged.
If someone conforms to protocols and passes the tests, there is still rspamd on the fourth layer. It does zillions of checks on the metadata and additionally learns via bayes. Dovecot moves all the crap to Junk and inserts the valid mails into their proper folders.
The fifth layer is me. If some junk mail arrives in the inbox, I move it to Junk manually and Dovecot tells rspamd to learn it as spam.
I use Rustdesk to access PCs and embedded devices from other PCs and embedded devices. Mostly doing remote support to avoid driving.
It’s easy to set up with a container-based server.
I don’t have to care about licenses and crap like that. It just works.
This is probably the reason. Older element versions has video and telephony via native interfaces and coturn/turnserver for firewall hole poking.
The newer Element X uses a different infrastructure that even allows multi user conferences. You need to update your well-known server response to point it to the new infrastructure: https://github.com/element-hq/element-call
If you use these powerline plugs, your house is also a huge antenna.
My internet access dropped occasionally until a telcom guy found the culprit. It was a neighbor using a Devolo powerlan adapter.
So yes, don’t use these. The only useful frequency in power cables is 50 or 60 Hz.
https://matrix.org/docs/matrix-concepts/end-to-end-encryption/
Key sharing When an event cannot be decrypted due to missing keys, a client may want to request them from other clients which may have them.
Suzune@ani.socialto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Can’t get SSHing shim to work with forgejo for the life of meEnglish
1·3 months agoIf you have forgejo or gitea ssh running on port 222, you need to specify it somewhere. Or else
gitcould connect to port 22, which is default for ssh.
Suzune@ani.socialto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Can’t get SSHing shim to work with forgejo for the life of meEnglish
3·3 months agoSo sshd is running. The first question is: is it running on the port you expect it to run? The main host can have sshd too and maybe you connect to the wrong port? Did you use a
~/.ssh/configfor your forgejo connection?
Suzune@ani.socialto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Can’t get SSHing shim to work with forgejo for the life of meEnglish
131·3 months agoIt would help if you explain “it does not work” further. It’s a bad desciption of the situation and we cannot look directly at your installation.
Suzune@ani.socialto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•What is the current state of Matrix?English
21·3 months agoIf users cannot do anything because all encryption keys are lost, then they need to know that and also how to avoid the situation in the future.
I think it’s not a bug. It’s simply no one online who can share a decryption key.
Suzune@ani.socialto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•What is the current state of Matrix?English
41·3 months agoThis is quite annoying. When will devs learn to tell people to resolve the problem instead of just showing a pointless error messages?
Not really. Postfix is very robust against attackers and knows to how to deal with bots by default. It makes sense to also configure SPF, DKIM and DMARC for your own safety.
If you want to stop the attackers from hammering, you can also add fail2ban.
If you want to avoid spam, you can attach a spamfilter to the delivery agent and let Sieve do the rest.
I’ve been running my postfix/dovecot combo using 4 mail domains for over 5 years without any problems. It’s simply fantastic.
At the moment I’m trying out Ampache. It seems to have more features than Gonic.
Suzune@ani.socialto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Looking for suggestions: Task scheduler ideally with remindersEnglish
2·4 months agoNothing special. Radicale is fine, too. As far as I see it also supports sharing of CardDAV among multiple users which Baikal does not.
One thing I needed after I migrated away from Nextcloud is the birthday calendar. There is a script for that on Baikal.
Next time, when you make major changes like ZFS upgrade, create a checkpoint and keep it for a while. You can roll back everything, even the pool version.
I personally like to run ZFS on a bare metal server, just the plain OS, no further “NAS” or virtualization software.
I don’t really know what your use cases are, so I cannot tell if it’s adequate for you.