Pretty sure the answer is: Yes, since I believe it’s part of the open source project chromium, it would be under the same open source license.
Pretty sure the answer is: Yes, since I believe it’s part of the open source project chromium, it would be under the same open source license.
There’s a post here saying it’s down but no updates: https://very.bignutty.xyz/notes/9hek2yioxnuw9f15
You can learn how to make a donut: https://youtu.be/nIoXOplUvAw
Using their own new protocol that no one else uses and they probably don’t even implement themselves yet.
The problem with that is you can’t unblock what your instance blocks/defederates from.
I like using if expressions in kotlin, but secretly sometimes I miss ternaries
They have an integration with container tabs, I’ve only used it once but imagine it could be handy: https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/use-multi-account-containers-mozilla-vpn
You wouldn’t download a car, would you?
This doc link says it uses “150mb of RAM” but realistically I think you’ll need a bit more than that: https://join-lemmy.org/docs/administration/administration.html
I’m self-hosting for myself with a 2GB VM and RAM usage is <50% with all the required containers running (postgres, etc.)
I don’t think this blocks all cookies, but instead disables all non-essential cookies in those cookie consent dialogs
You should add an exploding head 4th item to the meme with: app | tee log.txt
I don’t have any prior knowledge about it but it looks pretty invasive, I found this interesting article about it:
And this Firefox extension to block sites from scanning local ports:
That’s a fair point but it looks like it is in chromium.