Uh yes… There are instances (mine included) that’ll automatically defederate you if you have too many users with too few interactions, so better enable captcha if you’re worried about bots.
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Uh yes… There are instances (mine included) that’ll automatically defederate you if you have too many users with too few interactions, so better enable captcha if you’re worried about bots.
Thank you very much for the info! Maybe I’ll give it a shot again.
I’d also suggest Immich, but with a warning. On their GitHub page, they state:
Did anyone actually use this over a longer period of time, including updates, etc.? How did it work for you?
Yes, I’m using Vaultwarden as lightweight alternative to the Bitwarden server.
I’m saying I don’t trust 1Password. The OP asked for 1Password vs. Bitwarden. To me, Vaultwarden = Bitwarden and 1Password = Closed source crap.
I’m also part of the Vaultwarden crowd. I’ll never trust something that isn’t open source.
I think …
If I remember correctly …
I don’t want to fact check what I said right now, because I’m in the bathtub. I’m just talking from the top of my head.
I probably had this in my head, so nothing major.
Questions:
I think, the default docker-compose.yml
and lemmy.hjson
state that the PostgreSQL password and the pictrs API key have to match? If I remember correctly, they both have something like {{ postgres_password }}
as default. I found that weird, but I also didn’t question it.
What do you do if one service requires PostgreSQL 15 and another service requires an older version or something like that? Again, if I remember correctly, Lemmy devs recently downgraded PostgreSQL in the default setup for some reason.
I don’t want to fact check what I said right now, because I’m in the bathtub. I’m just talking from the top of my head.
Don’t get me wrong, I use a similar setup for my homelab, because I hate spinning up several instances of entire database servers just to get a service running. But I’d be lying if I claimed that I never ran into issues with that setup.
Yes, I had my mom start with Linux and she’s confused when she has to use Windows.
That’s a pretty bad point you made there. Imagine having to google for each app on your smartphone and tell me how that’s better.
What about the scammy search results that point to malware infected sites?
What about stability and security updates for the software you obtained that way? Every software will have it’s own update mechanism, if there’s one at all.
How is it not better to install or update all software on the computer with a single click or command?
Wow, whoever wrote this doesn’t have a clue about systemd, Firefox, Librewolf or whatever. I stopped reading after a while. Couldn’t stand it.
GeometricWeather isn’t maintained any more. Check out it’s fork BreezyWeather.
Did you look at the logs? If you’re running through docker compose, that’d be docker compose logs --follow container-name
.
Yes, it was an oversight by me, I’m sorry. You can now pull 0.18.2-linux-arm64
from my repo.
Looking for this morning’s release with the vulnerability fix.
You’re welcome! Today, the only commit that’s been made to lemmy is this one. I suppose you’re talking about yesterday’s security vulnerability fixes in lemmy-ui here and here?
If so, please pull 0.18.2-rc.1-linux-arm64
from my lemmy-ui repo on Docker Hub. latest-linux-arm64
works as well, as I periodically recompile it when interesting pull requests have been merged, so that one’s “bleeding edge” most of the time.
About Dessalines’ Docker repo: I don’t have access to that, unfortunately. But I’m pretty sure that Lemmy devs will soon provide offical ARM64 images again, after this is resolved.
Edit: Forget what I said, building new images now!
Uh… Contact the instance admin, the storage of the server is full. For this, they should have some kind of alert set up, actually.
But previously you said
Yes, I said that because I assumed that we were talking about what happens when the user’s instance bans them.
I made an announcement post for my community here and it has a GitHub link. I think, the repository has a python script that’ll do it.