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2 yr. ago

  • Maybe the scene is set in the UK.

  • I believe not. The question states "keywords" so it seems they want to try combinations of words they commonly used. And it makes a huge difference if the script can try one password per second or dozens/hundreds/more.

  • While it might be close to good enough for casual scripts, it is much better to use existing tools for performance critical applications, such as brute forcing passwords.

  • Everyone keeps saying that but I just can't see it. The only time my mails were rejected was because I didn't know what I was doing at the beginning of my journey. Now, whenever I changed my stack or did some major updates the past 20 years or so, I just go to 2-3 sites that analyze my mail server from the outside and tell me if there is anything wrong. The free tier is always more than enough. Just make sure there is at least one service in the list where you send an email to a generated mailbox and have it analyzed. Just looking at the mail server is not enough to find all potential configuration issues.

    I aim at a100% score. It's time consuming the first time around but later it's just a breeze.

  • Who asked about Threema?

    The comment above me started that topic. The one I responded to and you seemingly haven't read.

  • Threema is very security focused at the expense of user experience. You lost your private key? Tough luck, here's a new account and everyone will have to verify your new account again. I have had conversations with friends over five or six of their accounts because they use threema just like WhatsApp. I stopped recommending threema to folks without a basic technical understanding. Signal is more than good enough for their needs.

  • "Pete Complete" is just amazing in everything he does. Very well planned and narrated let's plays with the goal of achieving 100% competition of a game in one playthrough.

    I particularly enjoyed the Mass Effect series. Mass Effect 3 is almost complete now.

    He also played Mutant Year Zero, XCOM, different RimWorld expansions and more.

  • This is not correct. Modern game engines support both concepts.

  • This video might give you a good idea of what's going on behind the scenes and why things are not trivial to get right: https://youtu.be/yGhfUcPjXuE

  • You have to go out of your way to even find Tesla charging stations in Germany. They are comparatively rare and far in between.

  • Wireguard is very lightweight and it just works. No overly complex setup, tools, matching protocols, algorithms, versions, etc. It just works and it's simple UDP traffic. It's the first self hosted VPN that I actually love and that works on all my machines, mobiles, VMs with just a config file to fine tune what should go over the line.

  • Yes, I agree. This use case likely wasn't considered when the law was written. We'll see how things turn out in the future because at some point we will have enough very knowledgeable people regarding GDPR in the community who are willing and even keen on steering the project in the right direction towards compliance.

  • Most of your points seem to be spot on from what I understand as well. However, I believe that the GDPR requirements can and should be baked into Lemmy itself. This would prevent the fragmentation you mentioned. A guarantee of removing user data as requested while federated plus a guarantee to remove stale user data while defederated since requests won't get through in that case. That would "just" leave the list of processors. This one can be very tricky because you are not just sharing data with your home instance and their federated instances but also with the federated instances of those federated instances. The home instance has no way of learning about the 2nd degree federation. I have no idea how to get the network of data sharing GDPR compliant and I think this is the mich more complicated part that your proposal also suffers from.

  • Self hosting email is not difficult. This has been true in the past but with modern standards and tools it's much easier now. It just takes a few hours/days and some dedication to get right. There are free services that test your mail server and can receive your emails and tell you exactly what's amiss. I completely changed my mail server and software and got perfect scores in around two to three evenings tinkering around. Granted, I had some experience from the last time around ten years ago. This will likely hold up again for the next ten years as long as I update my software somewhat regularly. And my emails were never bounced/rejected apart from the very beginning of my journey.

  • Sure thing.

    So there are two parts to all of this:

    1. Getting MediaWiki set up , properly configured and running.
    2. Having it securely accessible from the Internet (if needed), including SSL certificates.

    Part 1 is well covered my the MediaWiki release already. You only need to worry about the correct configuration. When you download the current version from the official MediaWiki page, you'll notice that there is already a docker-compose.yml file in there. This gets you most of the way to your destination.

    Read the file and set the values of all variables you wish to override in a separate ".env" file in the same folder. It could look something like this:

     
        
    MW_SCRIPT_PATH=/w
    MW_SERVER=https://your-url.com
    MW_DOCKER_PORT=80
    MEDIAWIKI_USER=Admin
    MEDIAWIKI_PASSWORD=some_password
    XDEBUG_CONFIG=
    XDEBUG_ENABLE=true
    XHPROF_ENABLE=true
    MW_DOCKER_UID=1000
    MW_DOCKER_GID=1000
    
      

    Now you can just docker-compose up and everything will be set up when visiting your site for the first time, it should hold your hand, guide you through configuration options and finally offer you to download the LocalSettings.php file, that contains all the decisions you've made. You can review and adjust it futher and finally save it to the same folder as your docker-compose.yml file. Refresh the site and it should be accessible right away. I would say for a closed audience, these are the most important options to set:

     
        
    # The following permissions were set based on your choice in the installer
    $wgGroupPermissions['*']['createaccount'] = false;
    $wgGroupPermissions['*']['edit'] = false;
    $wgGroupPermissions['*']['read'] = false;
    
    
      

    These options will prevent people from creating their own accounts (you will have to create one for them from the UI) and it will block people from viewing any pages without being logged in.

    If you do not wish to use SQlite but rather a dedicated DBMS (I strongle discourage you from getting into that trouble for smaller or even medium user bases), you will find more information on the page for alternative configuration recipes.

    If you would like to go into part 2, just ask and I'll give you an overview of my setup here as well. I'm using docker-letsencrypt-nginx-proxy-companion.

  • Windows 11 has some niche features that set it apart in amazing ways. One of them is that it natively supports Linux GUI applications almost the same way as native Windows applications. No need to have a dedicated remote desktop window. Just intermingle Linux and windows applications through WSLg. Granted, it won't mean much to many users but as it stands, Windows is becoming the top multi-platform OS. Who would have thought?

  • I'm running MediaWiki for a role playing group in docker. The difficult part was getting everything set up to get certificates from letsencrypt and offering https without leaving docker compose. The great thing about this is that creating a backup or moving servers has become trivial now. As long as you don't expect your users to perform dozens or even hundreds of operations per second, I'd strongly advise sticking with SQLite to make your admin life that much easier. If you want, I'll look up my full stack and post it here once I'm not on mobile any more.

  • Almost everything has been mentioned already so I just stick with the unusual: I host a private MediaWiki instance for note taking in my pen and paper rounds. It's amazing once the other players got a bit more comfortable how to use it well regarding templates, categories and articles. My only regret is that I didn't set up new instances per gaming group.