Why does Cloudflare get a pass on the “if it’s free, you’re the product” mantra of the self-hosting community? Honest question. They seem to provide a lot for free, so…
Why does Cloudflare get a pass on the “if it’s free, you’re the product” mantra of the self-hosting community? Honest question. They seem to provide a lot for free, so…
I’m doing something similar (with a lot less data), and I’m intending on syncing locally the first time to avoid this exact scenario.
Yep, you just said the same thing with more words 😁
I’ve been looking around for notes apps with similar criteria with the addition of a portable format (markdown prferably) and, ideally, the ability to add images directly from the camera. I landed on GitJournal and backed it with a self-hosted Forgejo server, but this can be any git server. This has the benefit of requiring an ssh key pair for access
If you have NextCloud, you can try Deck. I moved off from NextCloud and Deck was, oddly enough, one of the harder apps to replace. I ended up with Vikunja. They have an android app in alpha but it feels pretty polished
I use Obtainium for all apps with no f-droid presence, I just forget which ones sometimes. It’s the browser extension that makes this one great. I wanted something pretty easy after losing the convenience of Authy desktop
When Authy dropped their desktop app, I picked this up for 2FA: https://2fas.com/
EDIT: oops, just realized this isn’t listed on f-droid…
I always feel like I should throw a turtle shell at the idiot driving in front of me
The magats love him because the dems hate him. We’ll still hate him when he’s in prison, so they’ll still love him
They want you to foot the electric bill for the LLM processing, they’re still going to collect your data. Double-win for MS!
I treat it like a junior dev, it gets the gist but may make mistakes and I work it into something usable.
I also like it to save keystrokes, like when I’m building an object, it knows the structure of that object, so it ends up being tab/enter/tab/enter/… Same process for creating converters between types.
I don’t expect much from it, but it does save time and keystrokes
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This exposé is a bit suspect, or at least this part is which makes me question the integrity as a whole:
He was forced to walk 21 miles daily, one way, to his job
Average human walks 3mph. This dude apparently never sleeps.
The whole thing reads like a corporate “uNioNS BaD” article
I did, best move ever
Don’t have children
A+ my friend. Solve this one, and you solve most of the others.
However, eating animals isn’t inherently bad on its own. It’s the SCALE at which we do it. Animals have been eating animals since there were animals, and as long as there is a natural balance, this can be a good thing. Factory-farming for billions of humans is where it all falls apart (much earlier than that, actually)
You either care about
the future of humanity and their place onEarth, or you don’t.
I couldn’t give less of a fuck of humans make it or not, but the Earth and its other inhabitants don’t need to go down with the shitty ship humans built.
I agree with your overall point, though, but I think the main solution to the problem is simply to use a condom. Most of the rest will sort itself out or be much easier to solve after there are less of us.
When I turn off Wi-Fi, I’m not on the same network as my server, it’s my carrier network so all the internet hops are expected.
The way it’s working now is I have a domain (example.com) that is set up on cloudflare DNS. I added a tunnel in cloudflare zero trust, which generates certificates you add to your server to encrypt traffic from your server to cloudflare. I have added these to traefik to be served with my service url (service.example.com). Then, I added a route in cloudflare for service.example.com.
This works fine. But, what I’ve also done is add a local DNS entry for service.example.com so when I’m on my LAN, I access it without going out to the internet and back (seems like a waste). However, this is serving the origin server certs from cloudflare, which causes trust issues
I’m using docker for everything: traefik, cloudflared tunnel, and my services on the same hardware. The tunnel just runs, and it’s configured on cloudflare zero trust to talk directly to the container:port over the docker network.
That’s what I’m settling on. However, it’s not just about trust, some of the services I’m exposing deal with moving files and I’m mostly interested in higher speeds associated with local transfers as well as not using up my internet data cap.
You’re right, I’m using the cloudflare DNS challenge to get let’s encrypt certs. I’m definitely hitting traefik. I’m testing by turning the Wi-Fi on my phone off/on and opening the page after. I get the same cert every time but it’s not trusted when on Wi-Fi. This makes sense since it’s the origin server cert which is meant to encrypt traffic between my server and cloudflare. To add more certainty, when Wi-Fi is on, a traceroute shows only one hop to my server and shows a bunch of hops when it’s off.
Yep, everybody in the US is just like this! Spot on broad generalization!
Also “en masse” (you must be American if you don’t know that because ALL Americans are stupid too, right?)
That makes sense, except Google kinda does the same thing. Everything they have is technically just a “free tier” of the Google One subscription, right? I guess I’m saying that “free tier of paid product” doesn’t automatically qualify a company as trustworthy for me. Is there something else that sets Cloudflare apart?