lemmy.net.au

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This instance is hosted in Sydney, Australia and Maintained by Australian administrators.

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What is Lemmy?

Lemmy is a selfhosted social link aggregation and discussion platform. It is completely free and open, and not controlled by any company. This means that there is no advertising, tracking, or secret algorithms. Content is organized into communities, so it is easy to subscribe to topics that you are interested in, and ignore others. Voting is used to bring the most interesting items to the top.

Think of it as an opensource alternative to reddit!

founded 10 months ago
ADMINS
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submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by utopiah@lemmy.world to c/selfhosted@lemmy.world
 
 

Plenty of us are using Docker, Podman, Incus, chroot jails, etc to isolate services.

It has become good practice and it makes setting up yet another service, usually, so convenient.

Some services like YunoHost, StartOS, Cloudron and others try to facilitate the process.

What I haven't seen though is a way to facilitate interoperability BETWEEN services we self-host. Sure there are plugins for each service, e.g. https://www.npmjs.com/package/peertube-plugin-livechat to provide XMPP chat for PeerTube, or anecdotal discussions e.g. https://github.com/jitsi/jitsi-meet/issues/7601 to embed PeerTube on Jitsi Meet.

So... how do YOU do it? How do you make on self-hosted service with another? Do you check after each one you install in the plugin category? Do you write your own plugins or extensions? Do you have a design pattern (e.g. Swagger API discovery with token generation per service, "cheat" via sockets, use a dedicate new service or even host) which you repeat?

I do ask because I bet most of you have a moment like this :

  • Hey how about we start this new project together?
  • Yes, let's change the World!
  • OK let's write manifesto.md
  • Where are we going to host it?
  • Hmmm we could use my Cryptpad instance...
  • OK but I don't get notification on my GMail, could we use GoogleDocs instead?

So... I feel like FLOSS self-hosting is honestly on-par functionality-wise with proprietary solutions. I might be bias but it's rare when I think "Damn... that's cool, shame I can't have it at home". I can nearly always (in fact I have a hard time thinking of an example) self-host functional equivalent solutions myself. The ONE thing that I feel is often missing is integration which relies on interoperability.

How do YOU it?

PS: this isn't about ntfy, PeerTube, HA or any specific service to a specific problem, it's about HOW to facilitate, when one wants to, already great services work together.

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BIRDCAGE out now on Steam (store.steampowered.com)
submitted 2 months ago by sundray@lemmus.org to c/shmups@lemmus.org
 
 

I played the demo, and it was pretty good IMO. Looking to pick this up when I've cleared my backlog a little bit.

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Did anyone else here noticed?

No matter the subject or your opinion, there's always people down voting you.

I don't care about up/down votes but we can't deny that's a way to know the acceptance of your thoughts by the community.

I tried to make some posts absolute neutral, just asking simple things to see if people discuss and interact which each other and me, I just got down voted out of nowhere.

Right now I'm seeing the karma count fighting going up and down, some people just down vote out of nowhere without any possible logic explanation.

Did anyone figure out what's up with those people?

Discussing on Reddit feels like a fight to know who has the best opinion of all, you just aren't allowed to think different or they'll down vote you to hell.

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The Israeli parliament's National Security Committee on Wednesday debated a bill to impose the death penalty on Palestinians convicted of terrorism, with "lethal injection" proposed as the method.

The bill, initiated by MK Limor Son Har Melech of the far-right Otzma Yehudit (Jewish Power) party, passed its first reading last week, and the National Security Committee is now preparing it for its second and third readings before it can become a law in Israel.

On Tuesday, the committee chair, MK Tzvika Foghel - also from the Otzma Yehudit party - published the guiding principles of the proposed law.

After the Hamas-led attack on 7 October 2023, Foghel wrote: "The people of Israel understand very well that nothing is more just and fitting than the death penalty for terrorists.

"Besides being just, the death penalty will ensure that there are no more bargaining chips and no more deals paid for with future Jewish blood," he wrote.

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cross-posted from: https://scribe.disroot.org/post/5685450

Archived version

Polish authorities have arrested several people in connection with a blast that damaged a rail line linking Warsaw to the Ukrainian border over the weekend, state media reported Wednesday.

Jacek Dobrzyński, the spokesman for Poland’s secret services minister, said the suspects were being questioned but did not provide details on how many were detained, according to the Polish Press Agency, or PAP.

Poland’s Prime Minister Donald Tusk has described the explosion as an “unprecedented act of sabotage.” Foreign Minister Radek Sikorski said it was “an act of state terror.”

...

Sikorski said Wednesday that he will order the closure of the last Russian consulate still operating in the country in response to the attack.

“In connection with this, though it will not be our full response, I have decided to withdraw consent for the operation of the last Russian consulate in Gdansk,” he said.

Two other consulates, in Krakow and Poznan, had been closed in recent years. The Russian embassy in Warsaw remains open.

...

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Despite heavy criticism from civil society and large parts of the EU Parliament, the EU Commission has now published its proposal for the “Digital Omnibus”. Contrary to the Commission's official press release, these changes are not “maintaining the highest level of personal data protection”, but massively lower protections for Europeans. While having basically no real benefit for average European small and medium businesses, the proposed changes are a gift to US big tech as they open up many new loopholes for their law departments to exploit. Schrems: “This is the biggest attack on European’s digital rights in years. When the Commission states that it ‘maintains the highest standards’, it clearly is incorrect. It proposes to undermine these standards.”

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I'm way over-analyzing at this point, so I'd love any suggestions or advice on approaching this new setup.

Today I run OpenMediaVault 7 on an i5 NUC with a cheap USB enclosure with 4x8TB in RAID5 (Hardware RAID, which I greatly regret).

Upgrading to a Minisforum N5 NAS Pro with 5x22TB and 3x4TB NVMEs.

My primary use is media which is the vast bulk of storage. I also point some Time Machine backups at it and use it to archive "what if I need this someday" stuff from old external drives we've used over the years. But all the critical stuff is also sent to Backblaze, so this is not primary backup per se, more for the local convenience.

I have decided against Proxmox, so this will be OMV (or maybe Unraid) bare metal. I've also ruled out TrueNAS. Proxmox and TrueNAS both just add too many new "pro" layers I don't really want to deal with.

I'm considering:

Setup 1:

  • 3 of the drives in mergerfs for media storage (all the stuff that annoying at most if lost), maybe SnapRAID.
  • 2 drives in RAID 1 for all the more important stuff like documents, user shares (which nobody in the house uses today except me), and the backups
  • 1 SSD as bcache for each of the above?

Setup 2:

  • RAID5 the whole thing again.
  • No idea what to do with the SSDs in this case, bcache again? Can you mirror + bcache SSDs?

Setup 3:

  • Take the ZFS plunge - My only real concern is the overhead (plus having zero experience with it). This machine will handle it fine (96GB RAM) BUT I was hoping to be able to leverage most of that RAM to do some Local LLM stuff. Nothing crazy, but I worry about ZFS reducing my ability to do that.
  • ZFS has built in tools to incorporate the SSDs as cache right?

Setup 4:

  • Switch to Unraid. I like OMV, but I can dig the "simplification" of Unraid.
  • 5 Drives in array (1 parity) plus nvmes for cache.

The caching stuff I clearly don't understand but I'm very interested in. I'm thinking about it mostly in "download and consume immediately" situations. Today I have a huge bottleneck in unpacking and moving. I've got 1gb fiber and can saturate it, getting a complete iso in just a few minutes, but then it's another 30min plus waiting for that to actually be usable.

Again, I've completely paralyzed myself with all the options, so slap me out of it with whatever you've got.

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I was originally used to "shutdown" when typing the shortcut in the search box and always accidentally typed that instead of "power off" after switching from GNOME to KDE. (gnome I believe called it shutdown). I eventually trained myself to type "power off" instead.

Now, with the latest version of Plasma, they had the audacity to rename the shortcut to "shutdown", so now I always mistype "power off"! This would be fine if it showed up the option once you started typing (like it did before with "shutdown" I think), but the "Shutdown" shortcut now only shows up once you type the full "power off", what the heck! Typing just "Shut" already shows the option, and before, typing something like "pow" was enough to show the "power off" shortcut

Why did they change it from power off to shutdown, and did the change in how KDE handles searching make the "synonyms" of certain shortcuts require the full thing? (I remember a video talking about how Plasma 6.5 changed search so that results start to show when you type one character only, which was pretty neat. I guess that had a few side effects?)

Is it possible to rename the shortcut to "power off" again, or at least make it show up when I type "pow"? I'm sure it's possible in KDE.

Other than this (very) minor complaint as well as a few others I will not rant about today, KDE Plasma has been awesome and I really like being able to customize the themes way more than GNOME ever let me (I am currently running Catppuccin Macchiato + purple accent colour and have the "taskbar" on the top since I like having the clock up there, and it also means the tab bar in my browser is closer to the apps which is nice. No more going up and down! Also, the "Elisa" music player is really good, and themed as well which is very nice. Calendar apps were a problem in KDE, neither merkuro nor Korganizer could sync with my Radicale instance for whatever reason, and the GNOME calendar doesn't match in aesthetics and I also can't configure what calendars are shown as the settings takes inspiration from the iPhone's Camera app where it's all in the system settings of a GNOME that no longer is installed on my system. I ended up using Thunderbird for calendar stuff. Also, LibreOffice needed to be run in XWayland to avoid lag, which is weird)

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  • Release Date: February 6th
  • Description: Defend your home using inventive boobytraps as the Trapper, or team up as three sneaky Bandits and try to escape with the loot! Bandit Trap is a wild 3v1 online multiplayer game bursting with pranks, physics-driven mayhem and laugh-out-loud moments—perfect for parties, friends and family game night.
  • Link: TBA
  • Price: TBA
  • Platform: Nintendo Switch 2
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cross-posted from: https://scribe.disroot.org/post/5683814

Britain's MI5 security service issued a new warning to lawmakers on Tuesday about attempts by Chinese agents to collect information and influence activity, its latest accusation that Beijing is trying to spy on the nation's parliament.

Lawmakers were told Chinese spies were targeting them by posing as headhunters or companies to make contact, with two individuals reaching out on LinkedIn to "conduct outreach at scale on behalf" of the Chinese government.

...

The speakers of the lower and upper houses of parliament said MI5 had said the Chinese Ministry of State Security was "actively reaching out to individuals in our community".

Britain's Security Minister Dan Jarvis told parliament the alert revealed "a covert and calculated attempt" by Beijing to interfere in UK politics and said the government would launch a counterespionage plan to address the threat.

...

The new warning comes after British prosecutors abandoned a case in September against two British men charged with spying on members of parliament for China, saying the British government had not provided clear evidence to show that Beijing was a threat to its national security.

The collapse of the case led to accusations from opposition politicians that Prime Minister Keir Starmer was prioritising better relations with Beijing over national security. The government denies that.

It also comes just weeks before the government must decide whether to approve a massive new Chinese embassy in London that critics say will pose a security risk.

...

Lawmakers should be careful because "China has a low threshold for what information is considered to be of value", Jarvis said, adding that China was also interfering with academic work in Britain’s universities.

He said ministers would hold a closed event with university leaders to highlight the risks of foreign interference.

In January 2022, MI5 sent out an alert notice about lawyer Christine Lee, alleging she was "involved in political interference activities" in the United Kingdom on behalf of China's ruling Communist Party.

Lee later sued MI5 in a bid to clear her name, but lost the case.

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At least five West Bank villages have been targeted as settlers lit Palestinian homes, cars, and a mosque ablaze, while the army delayed emergency vehicles.

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we can list movie titles with one word swapped out for "beanis"

beanis interviewer

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/39190924

Despite heavy criticism from civil society and large parts of the EU Parliament, the EU Commission has now published its proposal for the “Digital Omnibus”. Contrary to the Commission's official press release, these changes are not “maintaining the highest level of personal data protection”, but massively lower protections for Europeans. While having basically no real benefit for average European small and medium businesses, the proposed changes are a gift to US big tech as they open up many new loopholes for their law departments to exploit. Schrems: “This is the biggest attack on European’s digital rights in years. When the Commission states that it ‘maintains the highest standards’, it clearly is incorrect. It proposes to undermine these standards.”

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.zip/post/53363554

Economics Affairs Minister Vincent Karremans said he was suspending an earlier order to take control of Nexperia under a rarely invoked Cold War-era law.

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Economics Affairs Minister Vincent Karremans said he was suspending an earlier order to take control of Nexperia under a rarely invoked Cold War-era law.

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cross-posted from: https://scribe.disroot.org/post/5683395

Archived version

No silence is more haunting than the one following an explosion. It does not only concern what war takes away from human life, but also what it takes away from nature: forests turned to ash, fields reduced to dust, waterways contaminated by military vehicles and weapons. In Ukraine, this silence has a date, 24 February 2022, but also an echo that extends beyond the present.

Wars do not end when the guns fall silent: they continue to cause damage for decades, frequently far from the eyes and geopolitical priorities of the moment. It is with this awareness that an unprecedented event is taking place: Ukraine intends to ask Russia for $43 billion in climate compensation.

That Kyiv intended to file this claim was already known, but today, Tuesday 18 November, the figure was made public for the first time. This is not a generic compensation for environmental damage, but a precise calculation of the greenhouse gas emissions generated by the attack, to which the “social cost of carbon” is applied, a yardstick used in climate studies to assess the economic impacts of global warming.

...

The historical significance of this request is not only technical, but also legal and political. For the first time, an attacked country is arguing that an aggressor state must be held accountable for emissions caused by an illegal act of war; and the international mechanism to which Kyiv will turn – established by the Council of Europe following a UN General Assembly resolution – will accept claims for environmental compensation based on climate damage for the first time. The claim that Ukraine will file in 2026 will thus set an important precedent for other countries.

...

The request is based on the report Climate Damage Caused by Russia's War in Ukraine – 36 months (opens pdf), a pioneering study that calculates the emissions generated by the conflict: 294 million tonnes of CO₂ equivalent. This figure alone exceeds the annual emissions of 175 countries worldwide.

...

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cross-posted from: https://scribe.disroot.org/post/5682920

Archived version

China has played a key role in providing Belarus with resources and technology necessary to fulfill its military obligations to russia in the 2023-2025 years, a Belarusian organization BelPol, formed by former law enforcement and security force employees, said in a report (open link to Google Drive).

“We found that the Lukashenka regime systematically uses Chinese companies to circumvent international sanctions, and the Chinese leadership, aware of these schemes, takes no action to stop them.

Based on the collected data, one can draw a clear conclusion: China has made a significant contribution to the development of the Belarusian military-industrial complex and the supply of weapons for the russian army, which makes China a direct accomplice in the aggression against Ukraine,” the report said.

The study includes 55 sources of information, of which 46 are documentary evidence that are part of the closed part of the report.

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