Brewchin

joined 1 year ago
[–] Brewchin@lemmy.world 1 points 48 minutes ago

Both. "I am an idiot." "You should know better."

[–] Brewchin@lemmy.world 25 points 10 hours ago

Pocket won't be missed. Self-hosted alternatives like Wallabag are better and private, so switched to it many years ago. Integration (and enabled by default, requiring about:config to disable) ensured I'd never use it out of principle.

Fakespot (the website) was genuinely useful to help ID scams on Amzn Marketplace, though I never used the extension. But I think that enshittified in recent years, so (in the style of Stephen King's Misery) it's probably for the best.

Related, the Keepa extension is useful as a price rigging detector, but I expect that will "number must go up!" soon enough, too...

[–] Brewchin@lemmy.world 6 points 1 week ago

A sword and a dildo. Fightin' or f...un. Your call.

[–] Brewchin@lemmy.world 6 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

Short answer: Eventually, yes. But it also depends on what you mean by "privacy" and "danger", and what else you're doing with your NAS.

Longer answer:

Your NAS can be used in the ways you want, and with the privacy levels you want, without signing up to or using additional cloud services. By choosing to use QuickConnect, you're trading some of that for convenience.

History shows that most providers will have a data breach. What that breach includes depends entirely on what you given them and what they've taken. Including what their ToS and Privacy Policy says, and has ever said the entire time you've used it. That's assuming good faith and competence, as some services gather more. And then there are things like court orders, some of which you'll never hear about.

It also depends on their security model. It's quite likely that they're using their own certificates (as it does when you browse to your NAS's web interface), so would mean they'll be automatically decrypting and re-encrypting the traffic going through QC. This will often be stated as "end to end encryption", despite not really being that.

If your concern is filenames and such, then it's likely visible to them. Whether they record them is up to their current policies. If your concern is the contents of your screen, video or audio, then it is unlikely. Especially with things like SSH or remote desktop that may have their own transport security.

However, if you use your own remote connectivity option (eg. WireGuard, Tailscale), you're not sending data through their servers.

FWIW, I use Photos and Drive, and both naturally work seamlessly on my LAN. When I'm outside my network, I usually rely on what I've saved for offline use. But when I want something specific, I use WireGuard to VPN to my home network to get it. No cloud services and no "I hope they don't get breached this week" garbage - just a secure point-to-point connection between my device and my home.

tl;dr: It's less about what a company says/does about their service, and more about not giving them the opportunity to get it wrong, do bad things, etc.

[–] Brewchin@lemmy.world 5 points 1 week ago (7 children)

Hard agree. Legalised loan sharking.

They seem to appear a lot in these "buy European" communities. Still trying to work out if it's me (bias, etc), if people are just desperate to share any "made in EU" content, or if they're doing guerilla marketing. 🤷‍♂️

[–] Brewchin@lemmy.world 6 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (1 children)

IIRC, Voyager doesn't provide any notification capability. (At least not the version I use from Droid-ify).

It's never bothered me, as the only things I want notifications for are extremely limited. But I get how others might want the option.

It's likely because regular Android notifications all go via Google services. I'm not sure why the dev doesn't add the ability to use Ntfy.sh or any of the other non-Google options, though.

There's likely to be an existing feature request for it, though.

[–] Brewchin@lemmy.world 1 points 2 weeks ago

The UK seems to speed-run everything the US does politically, so "anyone" probably means a notable percentage of the population.

Today's council elections give a hint: Farage's Reform PLC blew many safe Conservative and Labour seats out of the water. You could fit a cigarette paper between the policies and actions of both parties right now, so they'll likely both be falling over themselves to work out how to attract the fash vote. 😬

Today's probably that grifter's biggest success to date, and likely all strategised by the Heritage Foundation.

[–] Brewchin@lemmy.world 1 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

Indeed. I tend to think of humanism as atheism with a moral framework.

Suspect OP has a different question they're really trying to ask.

[–] Brewchin@lemmy.world 2 points 3 weeks ago

I think the Spam thing is part of Korean food culture with their "army stew", made from ramen, spam, baked beans, kimchi, cheese and such.

[–] Brewchin@lemmy.world 8 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

Like the @a.gup.pe ones? They are kind of autoboost bots, but they do have communities behind them and it's annoying when people treat them like hashtags.

But I'd not use the term bots. They're more like old-fashioned email reflectors: a message goes in, and it then gets sent to everyone on the list.

[–] Brewchin@lemmy.world 11 points 3 weeks ago

Perhaps, but we're now in an age where IPO announcements, CEO changes and even new features inevitably lead to enshittification. There is no harm in having a backup plan.

I'd even say that anyone who doesn't have a plan B is an idiot, given recent history.

[–] Brewchin@lemmy.world 7 points 3 weeks ago

Not currently a Revolt user, but this would be a requirement for me to consider switching, too.

It looks like its API supports webhooks, so should be relatively straightforward to enable it (or perhaps through a third party, like Zapier)?

 

Just fired up Voyager on Android to discover a notification-style marker above the settings/gear icon. Opening Settings doesn't provide any clue as to why. Taking it further by tapping each of the top level menu items also doesn't show why.

Okay, Voyager. Keep your secrets...

Edit: F-Droid showed that Voyager had recently updated, so I tapped the recent apps button and swiped up to close Voyager. When I reopened it, the marker was gone.

 

Apologies if this has been asked before, but I didn't find mention of it. I use old.lemmy.world as my interface and I've noticed that roughly every month I'm:

  1. Forcibly logged out and have to do the re-auth dance for no apparent reason.
  2. Everything I've set in Settings is forgotten: Default Listing reverts to All, Default Post Sort reverts to Hot, and so on.

My browser is set to retain cookies and such, so it's not PEBKAC/PICNIC. Why is Lemmy doing a nuke-from-low-orbit every month (roughly; haven't measured it) despite me using it as recently as the day before? Isn't this bonkers practice?


Edit: I've just seen https://mastodon.world/@LemmyWorld/112706805419064266 which may explain it. Either way, the questions stand.

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