For a lot of devices that will leave an unsecured wifi network on that will
- allow any passerby to just set it up under their account and potentially mess with it
- use up valuable WiFi channels you might want to use for your own network
For a lot of devices that will leave an unsecured wifi network on that will
I’ve caught a few, usually the email gets leaked in a data breach (ie. Adobe got breached a while back, so I just block all email to adobe@mydomain.tld). Surprisingly I don’t really catch a lot of companies reselling mailing lists, it’s mostly data breaches that you can find on haveibeenpwned.
It’s basically when you drag an Ethernet cable behind you wherever you go, with the other end still plugged into your home switch.
If needed you could use a subdomain from a free dyndns provider. And if you’re going to be self hosting stuff having your own domain is probably good anyway.
Yeah, but that’s just the kernel. Anything above that (window manager, the utilities that they didn’t outright copy from BSD, apps, …) is basically closed source.
One thing it claimed was the ability to rewrite copy. Basically finally an improvement over spellcheck which has been the same for like 20 years. Would be nice to have something better built into the OS in every text field.
You could also have stuff like suggestions in your terminal when you’re starting to write a command based on what’s in the man pages and the layout of your filesystem.
The reason is probably that too many people got caught liking questionable content through the likes page.
Damn, even your slurs get maximum privacy.
That’s really only in theory. I don’t think there’s any country where the government does what the polis wants in every instance.
Pretty sure Twitter strips it out by default.
Yeah, I’ve used Nextcloud for this in the past too, but it looks like there’s a ton of other options as well judging by this thread.
Generally people make a huge issue out of something like that (some will even call it spyware, etc).
I think the best approach is to ask the actual community of users what they’re ok with before you start. You probably want to make sure it’s opt-in as opposed to opt-out, and be very clear about what information you do and don’t collect, and make sure it’s stored securely.
Don’t worry, Bari Weiss will come to his defense any time now.
It’s a pile of nudie mags out in the forest.
I feel that for a platform that is commonly used for pirated content, having telemetry that shows exactly what content people have is probably bad.
Next they’ll start selling that info to the MPAA so they can sue individual users.
It’s probably easiest to look at one of the many plugins for WordPress that allow you to use AWS S3 for image storage (and make sure you’re resizing images when serving them to users even if you want the high-res ones still available for download).
A bit more advanced would be adding cloudfront before your S3 bucket to save on bandwidth costs.
Be careful with AWS though, you’ll need to keep an eye on costs, and you should really think about whether you want to keep uploading your images at full resolution instead of resizing them first so they’re optimised for display on a website.
Thanks, I didn’t know about this, have been using ‘i don’t care about cookies’ for ages. Mozilla should really let us know if an extension gets acquired.
Those horses have great hearing too though.
Let’s start by putting up cameras in all his houses.