I mean if a centralized social media is what you want just join threads and cut the chase. The complaint they made, bluesky's federation does not solve. It is only not apparent because they have only one instance right now, similar to threads and Twitter.
Certainly some will say that, and even more would do if your environment is privileged (such as a safe neighborhood in the west or USA). You have to look at aggregate data, not anecdotes.
Which communities? I personally find most of my favorite communities to be better in lemmy than on Reddit, with a few exceptions.
Does Podman work well when you have multiple rootless containers that you want to communicate securely in a least-privilege configuration (each container only has access to what it needs)? That is the one thing I couldn't figure out how to do well with Podman.
That has never happened to me. May I ask which instance you signed up on? I'm curious to try signing up there myself
Your complaint is about an unknown instance admin committing a maintenance mistake. Will bluesky's promised federation protect against that? You could join an instance managed by a well funded public entity if you want something that gets close to VC-funding. (which aren't that reliable either. Look how many of these start-up platforms go away)
I'm not really following what's the issue here? Sounds like a wide variety of content that is the perfect medium to find people to follow so you can get a more filtered and curated feed, which mastodon comfortably supports.
I don't know any social media that boasts a decent news feed that you put 0 information into.
You don't have to choose. Joinmastodon.org chooses for you, and you can choose one yourself as well but only if you want to.
Porn industry is certainly a bad thing though. It is quite hostile to women, and many have been harmed by it and wished they had a good exit.
Bit I definitely agree that progressive lean is a good thing. Fwiw I didn't read this article.
What do you like about bluesky more?
What exactly breaks?
Because most people don't exactly want a community-led social platform that respects you and empowers user freedom, even if some say they do.
Bluesky is promising a Twitter-like experience. They promote their ties to the former Twitter, and promise algorithms, dopamine-inducing "reach" and "engagement", paid subscriptions, some degree of centralized control (primarily of the network's infrastructure), and a for-profit VC-funded company, all under the guise of federation. They claim a mastodon-like brand that they are yet to deliver.
Forgive if this is naive, but isn't wireguard p2p?
And you can choose a different instance on ActivityPub.
I think what you mean is abandoning self hosting right? Because self hosting Bitwarden would have similar issues if you don't take the initiative to update.
You are misrepresenting it. You would still run into this issue. Moderation being separate doesn't mean it doesn't exist. You will still not be able to follow someone your friends follow because your moderation service banned then.
Better than no one having the ability to follow that person because a centrally controlled social media banned them.
Unfortunately bspwm is better. Binary separation allowed for just about any layout imaginable, but river does not.
Didn't age well :(
Well he did promise he will fix it for good and that Republicans will never have to vote again!
What are your predictions for how a Trump 2025-2028 Presidency will go?
What are your predictions for his Trump's presidency will go?
Overall, I believe we will see a continuation of the trends from 2017-2020, but an increase or intensification of said trends due to Trump's experience in presidency and increased confident position.
- increased deregulation and cutting funding to regulatory bodies across the board
- federal workforce reduction
- immigration workforce reduction, reviving the spike in the backlog of pending immigration cases
- dramatic increase in tariffs. This has many implications, most importantly negative impact on domestic consumers, increase in consumer prices, but also economic war with certain players like China, and causing economic suffering to certain partners such as Mexico.
- Ukraine: this one is hard to predict, as trump is unpredictable on those. There's a good chance trump will push zelensky towards accepting a peace deal with Russia, but equally likely that he will up US' involvement in Ukraine (contrary to what Trump claims)
- Israel / Palestine: Biden admin was the first to show the kind of hesitant rhetoric we see today towards supporting Israel. Trump will reverse this trend, and we will go back to standard neocon Israel supporting. He will likely push for Israel to take over the west bank as a convoluted effort for "peace".
- interest rates: I am less certain of this, but there's a decent chance that trump pushes interest rates lower to catalyze short term economic growth
- job market: if interest rates drop, we will see a short term rally for the job market, especially in big tech. Long term ramifications are tough to predict
- border security: my unpopular / controversial opinion is that trump and biden admins are very similar on this. Although public sentiment about the border issues will likely shift, I do not expect a significant material change or major departure from biden policy.
- Healthcare: Trump didn't make any big moves in 2017-2020. I cannot forecast anything here.
- Abortion issues: with Republicans likely securing Congress, a federal abortion regulation is possible but not certain. Support for some type of regulation is near unanimous among Republicans, but some oppose the degree. Trump himself has flip flopped on whether a federal ban is necessary. I expect that there will be some regulation, albeit limited.
What are your predictions and thoughts?
Working from multiple computers - thoughts on auto-push branch to git repository?
Hi programmers,
I work from two computers: a desktop and laptop. I often interrupt my work on one computer and continue on the other, where I don't have access to uncommitted progress on the first computer. Frustrating!
Potential solution: using git to auto save progress.
I'm posting this to get feedback. Maybe I'm missing something and this is over complicated?
Here is how it could work:
Creating and managing the separate branch
Alias git commands (such as git checkout), such that I am always on a branch called "[branch]-autosave" where [branch] is the branch I intend to be on, and the autosave branch always branches from it. If the branch doesn't exist, it is always created.
handling commits
Whenever I commit, the auto save branch would be squashed and merged with the underlying branch.
autosave functionality
I use neovim as my editor, but this could work for other editors.
I will write an editor hook that will always pull the latest from the autosave branch before opening a file.
Another hook will always commit and push to origin upon the file being saved from the editor.
This way, when I get on any of my devices, it will sync the changes pushed from the other device automatically.
Please share your thoughts.
Any arguments against separating identity from instance/platform? (single identity across the fediverse)
I am sure it was discussed here before, but I can't find a good way to search this community.
Are there any arguments against having a user's identity federate, and be compatible across platforms?
For example, let us say I sign up with my instance, [email protected]
But what if I go on mastodon, and I want to have my own micro blog. Or maybe go to write freely and post some blog posts. I'd have to make a different account on each one.
What if mastodon or write freely could just let me log in with my lemmy account (or lets call it federated account). This has several benefits:
- users don't have to scratch their head on if I am the same person or not across these platforms
- theoretically, someone following my feed can get updates on what I do on multiple platforms
Now I understand this would be difficult to implement and iron out all the edge cases, but am I missing anything on why it wouldn't be a desirable feature, given it is implemented?
Using messaging protocols (XMPP, Matrix, etc) for federated social media vs. ActivityPub?
From a practical sense, ActivityPub may be the obvious choice as it gives easier interop with the largest federated platforms.
But what else? There are existing platforms built on these protocols, such as movim for xmpp, and another for matrix I forget.
From a technical standpoint, are there any major pros and cons?
What is so hard about implementing ActivityPub? What could have been done better?
I heard often about activityPub being challenging to implement.
Now I know part of this is because, if you are building on activityPub, you want interop with existing platforms such as mastodon, and they do their own thing.
But ignoring that aspect, what is so hard about activityPub? What could have been done better?
I am a software developer, so feel free to use software dev concepts and terms when explaining. Thanks!
Comparison of platforms compatible with Lemmy+Mastodon ? (Mbin, Piefed, FediLab, etc.)
Lemmy developers have said there are no near plans for allowing users to follow mastodon or other activityPub networks, so I'm considering another platform that can do this.
It looks like mbin, Piefed and FediLab have the ability to do this. Has anyone tried them and have a comparison?
I also heard it may be possible to do from just mastodon-like platforms. Anyone tried this?
What can ActivityPub do that RSS can't?
I know they're quite different technically. But practically, what does ActivityPub unlock that was not previously possible with RSS and basic web tech stack?
I think I have an idea of the answer. RSS may provide a way for users to "subscribe" to content from a feed, equivalent of following and putting it in a unified feed.
But it does not have a way for users to interact with the poster, like comments or likes. This may be possible with a basic web stack though, but either users will have to make accounts on every person's site, or the site has to accept no user auth. (but this could be resolved with a identity provider standard, like disqus does)
I suppose another thing activityPub does is distribute content to multiple servers. Not sure if this is really desirable though?
Anyways, did I miss anything?
Has anyone used nsjail? Any thoughts?
I recently learned about nsjail, a utility to sandbox applications or provide workload isolation.
It seems to be lighter weight than firejail and possibly better suited for server applications.
Has anyone used this? What's your experience with it? I'm curious about using it for my web server applications as an additional layer of Dr hotty.
A general fediverse client app, supporting multiple content types? (mastodon, lemmy, peertube, etc)
Is there any fediverse client out there (mobile or pc or web) that has support for multiple types of content, rather than just for one?
Most apps I find are only mastodon-like (including pleroma etc.), or only lemmy-like, or only peertube-like. One of the main benefits of the fediverse is that I could theoretically access all of those from one platform. But the clients I saw don't seem to support it too well.
A general fediverse client for multiple content types? (mastodon, lemmy, pixelfed, etc.)
Is there any fediverse client out there (mobile or pc or web) that has support for multiple types of content, rather than just for one?
Most apps I find are only mastodon-like (including pleroma etc.), or only lemmy-like, or only peertube-like. One of the main benefits of the fediverse is that I could theoretically access all of those from one platform. But the clients I saw don't seem to support it too well.
Suggestions for Improving Linux Server Security: Beyond User Permissions and Groups?
Hi all,
I found a hobby in trying to secure my Linux server, maybe even beyond reasonable means.
Currently, my system is heavily locked down with user permissions. Every file has a group owner, and every server application has its own user. Each user will only have access to files it is explicitly added to.
My server is only accessible from LAN or VPN (though I've been interested in hosting publicly accessible stuff). I have TLS certs for most everything they can use it (albeit they're self signed certs, which some people don't like), and ssh is only via ssh keys that are passphrase protected.
What are some suggestions for things I can do to further improve my security? It doesn't have to be super useful, as this is also fun for me.
Some things in mind:
- 2 factor auth for SSH (and maybe all shell sessions if I can)
- look into firejail, nsjail, etc.
- look into access control lists
- network namespace and vlan to prevent server applications from accessing the internal network when they don't need to
- considering containerization, but so far, I find it not worth foregoing the benefits I get of a single package manager for the entire server
Other questions:
- Is there a way for me to be "notified" if shell access of any form is gained by someone? Or somehow block all shell access that is not 2FA'd?
- my system currently secures files on the device. But all applications can see all process PIDs. Do I need to protect against this?
threat model
- attacker gains shell access
- attacker influences server application to perform unauthorized actions
- not in my threat model: physical access
Is there a fork of telegram that works with a self hosted XMPP or other chat server?
The telegram app has a very nice interface, but I want to use a self hosted xmpp chat server.
Is there maybe a fork of telegram that makes it work with a self hosted xmpp server? I would imagine that this is possible.
If not, is there anything that at least gets close to how nice telegram UI is?
Math and computation algorithms: why are they needed in programming?
Sorry, the question in title sounds naive. I have no doubt that math is essential in programming, but I am thinking about philosophy of programming and want to summarize when they're needed in programming. My attempt is below:
Most applications of programming are making electronics do things through their interfaces. Whether that's telling a screen to display something, a network wire to transport data, a hard disk to persist data.
But we often need math because we often transform data, or we might make said electronics do things based on user input, or an event. Transforming an event to data is a mathematical construction.
Some applications are almost purely mathematical, like banking, crypto currency, or encryption.
In your opinion, does this fully explain why we need math in programming? Is there a better way to sum it up?
A local database with a command line interface? (sqlite?)
Hi all,
I am looking for a local database that is easily accessible via the command line.
It can be SQL or non-SQL
Whats my use case? I want to use it kinda like a second brain. A place to save my notes, my todo lists, my book reading lists, links / articles to read later, etc.
I want it to be a good CLI citizen so that I can script its commands to create simpler abstractions, rather than writing out the full queries every time.
Maybe sqlite is what I need, but is that ideal for my use case?
Edit: removed notes, as evidently they aren't suitable for this and aren't like the rest.
Should I make this: (distroless) containers builder, by taking list of packages or a gentoo ebuild file
I am thinking to make the following tool, but wanted to get opinions before I embark on this journey.
The tool builds container images.
The images are optionally distroless: meaning, they do not include an entire distro. They only include the application(s) you specify and its dependencies.
What else does the tool give you?
- the build tool uses a package manager to do dependency resolution, so you don't have to manually resolve them like many docker files do. (NOTE: The package manager is not installed on the container image. It is only used by the build tool)
- uses gentoo's portage to build the software from source (if not previously cached). This is helpful when you're using versions of software that aren't built against each other in the repos you download from
- allows specifying compile flag customizations per package.
- makes use of gentoo's existing library of package build or install recipes, so that you only have to write them for uncommon apps rather than in every docker file.
I find it crazy that so many dockerfiles are doing their own dependency resolution when we already have package managers.
What do you think? Is this tool useful or am I missing a reason why it wouldn't be?
Moment of appreciation to this instance and its amazing admin!
This instance performs spectacularly. Admin is always on top of everything. No drama, and I have high confidence that this instance won't disappear without notice.
Our admin does not get enough appreciation, so big shoutout and thanks for your hard work ❤
Wayland tiling compositor that will work okay with nvidia?
I understand that nvidia support for wayland is lacking, but I know it's possible.
For context, I was using sway 1.8 for a while (no official support for nvidia). It was working almost perfectly, only minor issues. After the update to 1.9, I get constant flickering.
I can downgrade to 1.8, but the fact that 1.8 was working tells me that it is possible for a window manager to work well for nvidia. The problem is the sway team does not want that headache (understandably so).
Are there any alternatives that work well with nvidia?
What is the appeal of a binary-tree only in a tiling window manager (bspwm) vs. nested splits (i3 and sway)?
Bspwm has many appeals, and I do not want to focus on those. I want to focus on binary-tree separation of windows and its benefits vs alternatives. What's the appeal?
For comparison, Sway and i3 allow for the v-split and h-split layout, so you can have 2 or more windows split side by side. You can nest them, so it is sort of an n-ary tree. It feels a lot more powerful.
So why the binary tree? The others seem richer and more capable. Bspwm is marketed as more powerful than i3 but it seems the other way around?
Libraries to aid me in strategy-game-like simulation of a society (non graphical)?
I am looking to program something similar to a simulation game, but free-form in its customization and scripting to the point where no strategy game will get me close enough.
I initially thought to start from scratch, simulating all the basics. Simulating money, people, resources, maps, etc. Obviously this is very ambitious.
Are there any libraries or frameworks that could help me with this? I don't want something opinionated that decides the model for how to simulate, for example, money or a person. I want to preserve the ability to simulate those with the models and math of my choosing. But maybe a library that has the foundations of simulation in general, so that I don't have to build everything completely from scratch?
I understand what I said sounds very vague. This will be something I will discover as I do more of it, so forgive the vagueness.
Benefits of a join table vs. array to express relations? (outside of SQL)
I am building an application that is using JSON / XML files to persist data. This is why I indicated "outside of SQL" in the title.
I understand one benefit of join tables is it makes querying easier with SQL syntax. Since I am using JSON as my storage, I do not have that benefit.
But are there any other benefits when using a separate join table when expressing a many-to-many relationship? The exact expression I want to express is one entity's dependency on another. I could do this by just having a "dependencies" field, which would be an array of the IDs of the dependencies.
This approach seems simpler to me than a separate table / entity to track the relation. Am I missing something?
Feel free to ask for more context.