We use .lh, short for localhost. For local network services I use service discovery and .local. And for internal stuff we just use a subdomain of our domain.
We use .lh, short for localhost. For local network services I use service discovery and .local. And for internal stuff we just use a subdomain of our domain.
I personally only turn it off when someone’s visiting over night and the noise disturbs them, otherwise I just leave it on nonstop. Mainly because it would annoy me to try to open whatever and find out I have to turn on the server first. I don’t have a UPS and never even thought about getting one (for the server, I’m thinking of getting one for my 3D printer).
I mean, can’t the AI be trained to recognize the real traffic from the fake one? Not flawlessly, for sure, but enough to find a pattern.
I use Proton Mail for my primary domain and then addy.io for redirects to it. It costs $10 a year or something like that and it’s all I actually need.
Replying to emails is as easy as just hitting reply, the only thing that’s slightly harder is sending entirely new email (as in not replying) but even that can either be remembered, or the special email address copied from the addy.io app.
Seems it works on Linux fine: https://www.protondb.com/app/553850?device=pc.
Avahi basically broadcasts to the whole network “hello there, my name is some-cool-domain.local”. When you request that address, your router checks if someone broadcasts that name and uses their IP if so.
Yes, indeed, it’s your local timezone.
store all of the documents, desktop, downloads, etc. on a couple computers
Why use SSHFS for that? I recommend using Syncthing, it’s great for synchronizing stuff across multiple PCs (local and remote).
You need to host your domain somewhere, meaning some DNS provider needs to be the authority on what gets routed where when someone accesses your domain.
The provider will give you a list of nameservers when you make the domain part of their DNS.
I don’t know if there are any that are free (if you don’t also buy a domain from them), so you’ll have to check on your own. You can also self-host a bind9 server and do your DNS there.
Ah, I’ve only ever seen it in combination with a tunnel, so I assumed it’s part of that.
It makes a tunnel through to you and links to that.
True. But pretty much the same applies for dynamic DNS services, except you have to trust your dynamic DNS provider.
I meant more because people generally don’t have as much time to spend on IT security as companies, but yeah, it works for privacy as well.
My recommendation: host OpenVPN, change the default port and only access your NAS from the internet using your VPN. Also only allow the VPN port on your router firewall.
Possibly people would over time stop treating them like enemies, if they actually behaved like allies. The whole world is (very slowly) moving away from any dependence on China.
If they actually cooperated with the rest of the world instead of trying to take advantage of it while slowly planning how to take over Asia, they’d have it easier.
It’s so weird watching you guys come up with reasons why cooperating with the world about a new disease is actually bad.
Just thinking out loud, but can’t you build it from sources?
Nice article.
Note that I only did a brief evaluation of baby buddy, compared to that:
I don’t know about other features, like sharing etc., but my reason to create this was that I wanted something modern looking without security compromises.
Leak = some employee did a stupid and accidentally released the data publicly. Huge possibility no one ever saw it before it got taken down.
Breach = intentional stealing of data.