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Have you tried Fennec?
Have you tried Fennec?
It’s not loading for me. Is that instance up?
That’s how protests work. Just because you are not affected, does not mean you should not participate. Any subreddit participating is probably trying to show they are anti-nazi, and/or they support the efforts of the others in the platform.
Of course it causes trouble for users, but sadly that’s what Twitter has become and it deserves this hate. None of this would have happened if Elon truly advocated for freedom of speech, instead of using his power to push his right-wing beliefs.
I am proud that there are still some mods in Reddit that take the risk of protesting. I was afraid they got removed on the previous Reddit protest, about pricing changes.
Adding to that, not caring about politics probably means going with the flow and not reacting. Which, in today’s capitalist world, usually means supporting big corporations by using their services, just because everyone else use them.
This looks great. I have been using Nextcloud and FileBrowser for that.
We trust our medical records to insurance companies, that hire big consulting firms, that don’t know how to protect data or promote affiliate services. I love this world.
I work in another big4 company, and I have a strong feeling that your claims apply to us as well.
It’s funny though that before joining the company, employees are forced to sign some documents about anti-corruption policies.
I don’t understand this mindset.
In open source, both malicious actors and contributors will try to find problems.
In closed source, the development team is paid by hour (and probably don’t care about the product quality) and the only motivated people to find real issues are malicious actors.
But people still consider closed source safer.
Tin-foil hat on. So, with CCP/GSP, secret agencies are free to find backdoors on the system.
I didn’t know about those programs. I thought the Windows source code is kept secret from everyone.
That smokescreen argument makes a lot of sense. Both the company and our clients, tend to opt for ready out-of-the-box proprietary solutions, instead of taking responsibility of the maintenance.
It doesn’t matter how bad or limiting that proprietary option is. As long as it somewhat fits our scenario and requires less code, it’s fine.
Kitty has tabs
I used to run a Revolt server 3 years ago. The sound quality was beyond any other WebRTC service I had tried, but it was still in an early and it was lacking a lot of features. So, I switched to Element and Jitsi.
WireGuard supports mesh as well, but it requires to manually configure all the keys and all the IPs on all devices.
There is wgsd, which supposedly makes WireGuard mesh networking easier, but I haven’t tried it.
Is this like Tailscale? Maybe closer to Headscale, as tinc seems to be completely self hosted.
I think the OP is looking for a decentralized alternative to something like Nord/Express/Mullvad to hide their traffic, and not a way to connect their devices together.
I have Signal and microG with push notifications. Signal still uses websocket on my device. So, I guess it would be fine without microG push.
I am trying to understand.
Docker, which uses OCI containers that are supported by Docker, Podman, Containerd, systemd-nspawn, etc, is lock-in.
But Nix Shells, which require Nix, are not lock-in.
Also, how are you going to run Nix shells in VLANs? They run on the host’s network namespace.
Docker is not only about dependency management. It also offers service “composing”, via docker compose
, and network isolation for each service.
Although I personally love Nix, and I run NixOS on some of my servers, I do not believe it can replace Docker/Podman. Unless you go the NixOS Containers route.
I do. When I watch Odysee.