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norb norb @infosec.pub

Just a dude who reads stuff online.

Posts 1
Comments 28
Vulnerability fixed
  • I see more stuff now! Still can't tell if it's all the stuff I was subscribed to before but it looks better for sure.

    Thanks, Jerry!

  • Vulnerability fixed
  • Unsure if anyone else is having the same issue I am, but it looks like all of my subscribed communities got broken during this time. I see them as subscribed in the sidebar, but don't see any posts from them (nor do they appear in the communities page for the entire instance).

    I'm not sure if unsub/resub-ing would fix it or not.

  • What is the difference between AdGuard DNS, NextDNS, Rethink and TrackerControl?
  • You can get some of this with a pi hole/vpn setup. There’s actually a really nice one you can get as a droplet (basically a virtual machine) on Digital Ocean.

    https://marketplace.digitalocean.com/apps/pi-hole-vpn

    Once it’s up and running it can be a full tunnel vpn or just a dns solution (also over a split tunnel vpn).

    Might not give the full tracking protection exactly but will kill most ads.

  • Fediverse privacy nightmare?
  • I really think that the corporate systems we’ve all grown used to have tricked people into thinking their data was “safe” just because some big company was “taking care of it.”

    Also possible this person works for Reddit or something 🤪

  • Why does a personal instance have a list of banned users I didn't ban?
  • I ran my own instance for a little bit, and I thought if you had servers you set up to “trust” (I forget the exact wording but there’s a field for it in admin settings) then bans can come in that way.

    I could be completely wrong of course. ☺️

  • How do you handle / cope with stress?
  • You’re welcome.

    Stay strong and know strangers have your back, even virtually and anonymously.

  • How do you handle / cope with stress?
  • Just wanted to say “this too shall pass.” Surgery is never fun but at least it’ll be fixed soon. Losing pets hurts but you have all the good times to think back on, and maybe a new pet to look forward to as well.

    I have been one of those people who are pretty negative with their outlook on life. I started therapy because I was tired of being frustrated and angry and, frankly, depressed all the time.

    One of things I learned is that if you aren’t naturally “happy go lucky” you have to work at it. Why I ever expected to just be happy now seems like a real “no shit” moment. But once someone told me that I’ve been able to look at my life in a different light.

    I’m still negative as fuck, but at least now I can recognize it for what it is, short circuit my thought process a little bit, and not spiral as much as I used to. I’m a middle-aged work in progress but that’s ok!

    Good luck, fellow traveler!

  • How do you handle / cope with stress?
  • I don’t really have a recommendation per-se, but I did come across this site recently which might be interesting to you.

    https://abandonwaregames.net/

    They have installers for some of them, and links to Stream/GOG/etc. if you can still purchase them.

    Maybe I do have one recommendation: https://abandonwaregames.net/game/star-wars-dark-forces (I think it’s $3)

  • What is a fun childish thing you still do as an adult?
  • Way to brighten someone’s day with something simple. Super awesome!

  • Thank you fediverse!
  • The other thing that I don’t quite get about it is, you can come across the “fragmented communities” either through random chance or consciously seeking them out, and just subscribe to them. Now you can participate in multiple communities from your home instance.

    I get people are lazy and just want to have the stuff they like shoved in their face, but IMHO you get a much better result when you have to put a little skin in the game.

    It also discourages some level of shitposting because shitposters have to work just as hard to find the places to make their dumb jokes and in my experience most of those types are not going out of their way to do that.

  • petition: Defederate any instances that federates with threads proactivly , add threads.net on blocklists everywhere.
  • "Insert_Bad_Actor" is so widely vague that it can apply anywhere to anyone (slippery slope, I know, but this entire discussion hinges on some application of the principle).

    Two months ago the rallying cry for federation/fediverse was "YOU CAN CONTROL IT" which very quickly has morphed into "YOU CAN CONTROL IT AS LONG AS YOU FIT IN THIS PARTICULAR BOX." A lot of this feels like it's coming from a place of fear, which is not a great place to make informed and logical decisions from.

    A lot of the discussion I've seen here and on Mastodon around Meta/Threads/federating with a corporate entity seems to be circling around three issues.

    1. Privacy. There is an assumption that as soon as Meta gets it's fingers into the metaverse pie they'll hoover up everything they can. My question to anyone that thinks this is, "How do you know they don't do it already?" Meta can very easily have a server setup somewhere to pull in ActivityPub information. IT'S THE ENTIRE POINT OF FEDERATION. You can't stop them, other than to block the instance. So unless someone figures out that Meta is running a particular instance and then announces it so that admins can block it, it's reasonable to assume it's already happening. This just means what you post already isn't private, and never should be assumed to be.

    2. Ads. Somehow people think that Meta will abuse federation to sells ads to send out as posts. Which, if they do that, they will be quickly blocked and they've just ruined their new crop of eyeballs. On top of that, sending ads out into the void to end up next to god knows what content, on god knows what server, in front of god knows who, is not something that most ad buyers are going to spend money on. Any ad buyers want to know that they are getting value for their spend.

    3. EEE, or Embrace Extend Extinguish. This is to me the most valid argument for keeping them at arm's length. The basic premise is that these huge corps can spend the money up front to build on top of an open standard, add improvements that will be limited to only their version, then once they have the market share/cornered pull the rug out by either defederating and hurting the whole thing, or by locking users in to their "better" service. This has happened a number of times in the past, and Facebook has been guilty of it themselves.

    Whatever happens with this in the future will be interesting to watch unfold, that's for sure. But doing anything before the service even has the hooks to connect in and federate seem so premature to me.

  • I'm making a browser addon for quickly navigating to Lemmy communities. (Update: It's out!)
  • Love this idea! Please share if/when you think it's ready.

  • To what RSS feeds are you subscribed?
  • Replying to recommend NewsBlur to anyone that’s looks for a reader. They have a free tier, and solid mobile apps (for iOS anyways). https://NewsBlur.com

  • To what RSS feeds are you subscribed?
  • Check out NewsBlur. It spun up out of the demise of Google Reader. https://NewsBlur.com

  • Best DNS for privacy?
  • HA! My ISP injects ads into search results with their DNS. No thanks!

  • Visiting the US soon - do I really have to tip?
  • This is it. There is a kind of understood, cultural part that some of the other commenters are missing.

    There are situations where (traditionally) tipping is expected, and that is at a sit down style restaurant or at a bar. If the restaurant requires you to fill your own drink, bus your own table (clear the dishes), or carry your own food typically Americans do not tip (this would apply to most fast food places, or places as you've described where you walk up to a counter). Do most of these places still put out a tip jar? Yes. Do most customers tip? Probably not (check the jar, it might have some token coins or a few dollar bills in it, but it will not be full).

    Are you an asshole for not tipping? That depends on what the situation is. Did you just sit down for a 2 hour meal with 10 people and leave $5? Yes you are an asshole. Did you drive through Starbucks or a burger place and not put a couple bucks in jar? You are probably not an asshole.

  • Why do people host Lemmy instances and how do they pay for them?
  • It was very obvious for me. A post would only have one comment, but then dozens when I clicked to the original instance.

    Maybe I'll try to spin up a brand new one and see if it's any better.

  • Why do people host Lemmy instances and how do they pay for them?
  • I ran mine for a couple weeks, and communities I'd been subscribed to from day 1 were still missing most comments on the posts unless I clicked through to their page. Maybe there was something funky with my install, but I used Lemmy's ansible scripts to deploy so I don't know what else I could do.

  • Random YouTube comment on the whole Reddit situation that perfectly sums up my thoughts
  • My feeling is they looked at their user numbers, and the specifically those using the API and/or 3rd party apps, and did the calculation to decide that they wouldn't lose enough people to cause a mass migration.

    I think whether that calculation was correct or not still remains to be seen.

  • Why do people host Lemmy instances and how do they pay for them?
  • I asked another commenter here the same question that I'm going to ask you.

    I was running a my own single user instance, but I had a hard time getting comments to come in to mine. Have you found a good way to get Lemmy to more reliably pull in comments from remote instances?

    I would have to browse out to the original instance to see most of the comments, then back to my own if I wanted to comment (if it was under a comment that my instance hadn't pulled in, then too bad), then back out to the main site to continue reading. I found that process very tedious so I switch back to a more populated server which seems to pull in most if not all of the comments.

  • bleacherreport.com The Iron Sheik, WWE Hall of Famer, Dies at Age 81

    WWE Hall of Famer and professional wrestling legend The Iron Sheik has died at the age of 81, according to a statement posted on his Twitter account on…

    The Iron Sheik, WWE Hall of Famer, Dies at Age 81

    A true legend, one of a kind.

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