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Darkassassin07

@Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca

🇨🇦

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Darkassassin07,
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Well, we left reddit for beginning to plant a walled garden, so…

Darkassassin07,
@Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca avatar

Yeah… That’s what I said…

How to get a private car

Hello internet users. Someone in my family is looking to buy a car and wanted some recommendations for a private one. They are looking to buy new, and need Android Auto and CarPlay. I know all new cars suck for privacy by default, but I was hoping someone here could offer some insight as to which cars can be made better and what...

Darkassassin07, (edited )
@Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca avatar

Android Auto and CarPlay or Privacy. You won’t get both.

Your use of ‘need’ is quite a stretch.

Radarr/Plex Files Randomly Gone

I just went to watch a movie and my server said it wasn’t there, so I went and check the PC folders and all of my movies are gone. Not in any of the recycling bins, not anywhere, just gone. What would have caused this? How do I stop it from happening again? It’s been working fine for months then this just happened.

Darkassassin07,
@Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca avatar

Do any of your plex users have the permissions required to delete files?

Radarr doesn’t delete video files unless replacing them with a new one, or commanded to delete them. It will delete related metadata files like images, subtitles, and nfo when it thinks a video file has been deleted though.

Your logs repeat with root folder ‘E:/Movies’ was not found while trying to import new media, but doesn’t mention anything else. Does that folder still exist, or was it also deleted? All your movies, or just some? Were other libraries modified? (tv shows)

Darkassassin07,
@Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca avatar

80% of social media is just reposted memes. TF are you talking about…

Just be happy people are enjoying what you’ve created. It’s not like you were being paid for it anyway.

Darkassassin07, (edited )
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Emby, Jellyfin, and Plex will all detect connection speed, adjust quality settings, and transcode the media to playback without buffering.

I wouldn’t recommend Plex. They’ve been steadily moving away from self-hosted private media servers and towards just serving comercial content to you.

I myself run Emby as I’m rather fond of their development team and their attitude towards privacy. It does require payment for ‘emby premier’, ie the installable client apps and transcoding features, but it has single payment lifetime licenses as well as monthly.

Jellyfin is a popular open source option that is built on a fork of Embys older open source code before they went closed source.

Either would work for you.

Darkassassin07,
@Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca avatar

Oh fuck.

I just remembered I use cloudflare as my name servers, google (well, Squarespace now) only handles the registration.

I probably don’t have to do anything then.

Kinda feel like a moron now…

Darkassassin07, (edited )
@Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca avatar

I’m an idiot.

I already do this. The swap to Squarespace wont actually effect me.

🤦

Darkassassin07,
@Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca avatar

Idk, but it seems really stupid.

Having not actually looked into it at all:

I’m wondering if they have an api for updating records instead of traditional DDNS. Not the same thing AFAIK.

Either way, I’m already using cloudflare as a nameserver so this shouldn’t matter as much as I thought.

Darkassassin07,
@Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca avatar

Tbh, laziness and lack of need.

I’ll probably reconsider once renewal comes around, but that’s ~4 years away. Until then, as long as things continue functioning: meh. Doesn’t really make a difference.

Darkassassin07, (edited )
@Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca avatar

Youtube never knows the private half of your key pair. That never leaves your system.

Anything encrypted with the private half can only be decrypted with the public half, and anything encrypted with the public half can only be decrypted with the private half. These halves are known as the public key and the private key. Each side of the connection generates their own key pairs.

We both generate a set of keys, and exchange the public halves with each other. I then want to send you a message: I first encrypt it using my private key, I then encrypt it again using your public key and send that to you.

In order to read that message, you first decrypt it using your private key. This ensures the message was intended for you and wasn’t modified in transit, as you are the only one with access to that private key and only its matching public key could have been used to encrypt that layer.

You then decrypt it a second time using my public key. As I’m the only one with access to my own private key, you can be sure the message was sent by me.

As long as that resulted in a readable message; You’ve now verified who sent the message, that it was intended for you, and that the contents have not been modified or read in transit.

All this, including the key exchange is handled for you by the https (tls) protocol every time you connect to a website. Each of the messages sent between you and the site are encrypted in this manner.

Darkassassin07,
@Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca avatar

Exactly. Once encrypted with your public key, you’re the only one who can decrypt and read it as you are the only one with access to your private key.

Darkassassin07,
@Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca avatar

As far as I understand a key pair can be used bi-directionally like I’d described. Was I mistaken?

In practice, the private key is usually used to create signatures instead, but I avoided that for simplicity.

Darkassassin07, (edited )
@Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca avatar

Are they supporting FOSS, or looking to buy out the project to make it a closed in-house solution and avoid the bad publicity they created this last week?

Darkassassin07, (edited )
@Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca avatar

I originally setup Plex and was immediately unhapy with their always online model as well as really poor support on their forums.

Pretty quickly moved to Emby and have been happy since (7 years). It’s not FOSS but it’s not locked down nearly as much as Plex, and they have a focus on keeping your info within your own systems. No telemetry.

I don’t mind paying a bit to support development, especially when they offer lifetime options instead of being stuck with a monthly subscription.

Jellyfin has branched out more into niche features like watch parties, leaaving some stability to be desired. Especially with apps like smart TVs. Emby has focused more on its core reliability across all platforms, comming up with a product that’s nice and stable pretty much everywhere.

Jellyfin was a fork of Emby when Emby went closed source as users kept removing the paywalls for premium features. Development time isn’t free; that’s not sustainable for a fulltime dev. Since, Jellyfin has barely kept up, lacking the resources/funding to really flesh out their code. (hell, ~75% is still embys code AFAIK)

Darkassassin07, (edited )
@Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca avatar

Yeah, but relying on peoples generosity is less than ideal unfortunately…

On the other hand; when you’ve got to pay to use a product, you’re a bit more entitled to its use and support than a free project that gets worked on at the devs leisure. Especially when the developers maintain that same view.

It’s a fine line between securing stable income for your efforts while not limiting the usage of your products. I think Embys developers have done a pretty good job keeping that balance. I’ve certainly never had an issue with the activation and use of premium features, and the licence I bought 7 years ago has held excellent value. I’ve just been waiting on some funds to donate ontop as I feel I’ve gotten more than I’ve paid for.

Darkassassin07,
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OpenVPN host to keep mobile devices behind pihole and able to access non-public lan services.

Darkassassin07, (edited )
@Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca avatar

Ah; then host the OpenVPN server from hetzner, the pi as a client, then configure the server to route traffic out through the pi client into your LAN. Your own little vpn tunnel, instead of using something like cloudflare tunnels.

Wan client > Hetzner > pi client > lan service

Darkassassin07,
@Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca avatar

Soup, chili, cereal; it’s all just salad.

Darkassassin07,
@Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca avatar

if(condition) {#block never used} else {#actually do a thing}

Vs

ifn’t(condition) {#actually do a thing}

Vs

if!(condition) {#actually do a thing}

Darkassassin07,
@Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca avatar

The imdb lists are monitored by Radarr, but aren’t created by me.

I just found a few public lists I like and now whenever new content is added to those lists by their maintainers, Radarr adds+downloads it.

Darkassassin07, (edited )
@Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca avatar

That’s what conversions conversations with actual people are for.

I collect vast amounts of media of all sorts, then look through it based on recommendations from friends/family, as well as looking at actors/studios/genres I enjoy.

I don’t need everything fed to me by a computer, I’ll explore my own interests.

Darkassassin07,
@Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca avatar

I’ve run it on every pi I’ve used for several years now, though they are typically pretty quiet systems. Usually something like pihole or a reverse proxy. Not much writing going on. I’ve restored about a dozen of those images and never had an issue.

I also tend to keep 3-6 backups at a time. If the most recent is messed up for some reason, there’s others to try. (though I’ve never actually had to try more than one)

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