The power is out and my laptop has less than 10% battery left?
It's pacman -Syu time.
The power is out and my laptop has less than 10% battery left?
It's pacman -Syu time.
I use Nextcloud with Nginx Proxy Manager and just use NPM to handle the reverse proxy, nothing in Nextcloud other than adding the domain to the config so it's trusted.
I use Plex instead of Jellyfin, but I stream it through NPM with no issues. I can't speak to the tunnel though, I prefer a simple wireguard tunnel for anything external so I've never tried it.
Edit: unless that's what you mean by tunnel, I was assuming you meant traefik or tailscale or one of the other solutions I see posted more often, but I think one or both of those use wireguard under the hood.
I have a feeling the people making fiber internet faster aren't the same people installing it in neighborhoods.
Damn I forgot no content existed online and could be profitable before YouTube came along and saved us all from the dark ages.
Exactly, then it could have just been a text list on a webpage and we'd all be better off.
Am I missing something in this article? I'm not defending either company, but it doesn't seem like they actually have any evidence to confirm either is doing this.
The world's top two AI startups are ignoring requests by media publishers to stop scraping their web content for free model training data, Business Insider has learned.
It claims this, but then they say this about the source of this info:
TollBit, a startup aiming to broker paid licensing deals between publishers and AI companies, found several AI companies are acting in this way and informed certain large publishers in a Friday letter, which was reported earlier by Reuters. The letter did not include the names of any of the AI companies accused of skirting the rule.
So their source doesn't actually say which companies are doing this, but then they jump straight into this:
AI companies, including OpenAI and Anthropic, are simply choosing to "bypass" robots.txt in order to retrieve or scrape all of the content from a given website or page.
So they're just concluding that based on nothing and reporting it as fact?
Are you under the impression Microsoft was being paid to find that exploit or something? How is that at all related?
That truly was an independent third-party finding an exploit, and do you know why it was possible? Because the code was open source.
Great point.
I tried Wayland again on a new CachyOS install and I've only had a couple minor issues so far, so I'm sticking with it this time.
That would be way more complex to have the motherboard play than a sequence of beeps at different frequencies. Especially at the time.
Sure, but if you're already going to have your 2FA codes available from anywhere you could possibly want them like that then you're already sacrificing security for convenience.
I'll still take my chances with my LAN/VPN-only accessible Vaultwarden instance that manages both passwords and TOTP over anything internet-accessible that handles just one, but to each their own.
I can't tell you how long I've wanted to have a self hostable authy alternative with mobile and desktop apps plus a web portal.
Why not just use one of the password managers that also support this? Vaultwarden also has all that.
Cool, best of luck. I've been using lightly for a couple months via the AUR package and I really like it.