I believe Zen’s sole focus is to provide a different UI / UX on top of vanilla Firefox, so I would assume that it is no more or less private than Firefox.
I believe Zen’s sole focus is to provide a different UI / UX on top of vanilla Firefox, so I would assume that it is no more or less private than Firefox.
Thank you for the tip, but is there any way to delete the activity data from Meta after de-linking?
PiHole with unbound (it’s its own recursive DNS resolver so you don’t depend on Cloudflare, Quad9 and others) set on my local network DHCP, plus AdGuard’s DNS Proxy to use PiHole outside my home on my phone through DNS over TLS.
Oh nice, that’s a clever solution and indeed easy to host.
Are they really hosting it themselves or are they just proxying request to their “partner”?
Holy molly, I wasn’t expecting this! Well, I guess I’ll try that out once Electric Eel’s released
TrueNAS SCALE expects you to deploy Kubernetes clusters, it is unfortunately not meant for running plain Docker. You can jump through hoops to get it working but I personally gave up and ended up running a VM on top of TrueNAS just to run Docker on it.
I don’t know about Unraid though and OpenMediaVault felt a bit unpolished the last time I used it and I can’t attest for its ZFS support.
If I understand correctly, it’s just a fancy donation?
I’m surprised Datadog is that much of a money maker to be able to afford GitLab
I just set it up following your comment but I cannot figure out how to set it up in order to type in different languages without changing keyboards.
What I personally do is:
This way restic only has to process the data once.
I really like Readeck, it is very polished and the fact that it copies links content is very useful when saving Medium blog posts (and generally to make sure that I don’t lose the content if the linked page is ever removed)
If you use a third-party’s DNS server (such as Cloudflare, Quad9 or Google) as your upstream DNS server, you only have to update PiHole.
If you have set up your own upstream DNS server using a DNS resolver like unbound or Bind9, update it as well as your PiHole.
I struggle to find if it uses DNSSEC or even a change log. If it does, contact the maintainer and disable DNSSEC (if you can) until a fix is released.
They maintain their own resolver, so they have to patch it if not done already.
It’s the latter. Unless you run your own DNS resolver, most people are safe
I’m not familiar with off-the-shelf DNS filtering on mobile, but since running a DNS resolver on-device would be impractical, I think they must be using a DNS server that they maintain. Which means that unless I’m wrong, the vulnerability lies on their end, you should be fine.
Exactly, I don’t get the “Mastodon as a poor man’s RSS agregator” trend
Owner of Cloud company that sells AI services tells governments that AI-powered surveillance is good.