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Use rclone
Use rclone
Absolutely!
If anyone is interested here’s a great thread on it
Just be cautious when moving or backing up the files, things like rsync and bakula have specific flags needed to preserve symlinks.
Checkout plexamp as your client if you use plex
Immich to an NFS share that’s exposed to the nextcloud container is very seamless to the end user and can be setup in the external sources in the nextcloud web gui.
I’d be wary of yandex
https://www.cvedetails.com/vulnerability-list/vendor_id-6851/Yandex.html
Yup.
Buy any domain name, doesn’t matter what. I pay 15 dollars a year for mine. https://gandi.net
https://mailu.io/2.0/ is pretty turnkey
https://github.com/docker-mailserver/docker-mailserver has a lot more customizability and you can chain together stuff like encryption, spam filtering, auto replies with an AI agent. However those are all other containers you’ll have to add into your environment.
https://jzweig.com/blog/setup-your-own-email-server-with-docker/ Is a really simple how to
Whatever you do, pay close attention to your SPF, DKIM and DMARC
https://www.howtogeek.com/devops/dkim-dmarc-and-spf-setting-up-email-security/
Edit: OP asked for free, secure, and doesn’t get taken down for inactivity. If you want to do that and pay as little as possible, with the most security, you’ll have to self host. Otherwise you should pay for the service, or deal with the data brokers that offer free email. In capitalism, unfortunately, there is no free lunch.
I think that’s why most of us are here on Lemmy. However I don’t want to assume the motives of others.
I think privacy and social media are inherently at odds. Social media is built around the concept of sharing personal metadata through memes, opinions and is generally the point of socializing. Your personal data is the currency of social media.
You can however run any LXC which you can definitely do natively.
Where’s that in the documentation?
Correct, so when I post my song I created to Funkwhale, it’s then federated across the fediverse, living on other servers and able to be downloaded.
Let’s say I use the wikimedia license and allow reproduction of my music as long as I’m credited.
Someone in the fediverse likes my song and they download it. Then use it in their licensed DRM enabled media and give me no credit.
Who then protects my license and attribution rights beside myself? Does this open up others in the fediverse who hosted my media and allowed download to suit? The courts that would hear the case are unlikely to provide a distinction between the user who stole my media and those hosting it.
What prevents Funkwhale from charging a fee for their streaming app and profiting from my song and cutting me out of profit share? Which is exactly what digital distributors do all the time.
How does Funkwhale prevent the upload and sharing of licensed music by unlicensed parties?
None of this is referenced in the documentation or ad copy on the site.
I’ve seen funkwhale posted here multiple times, and these questions are never addressed.
That’s fair enough, so who handles licensing. How do you protect the copy left aspect of your music? How do you prevent your work from being freebooted?
The publishing referenced in the ad copy. There’s no talk of how licensing is handled or who hosts what where. Just because it starts off as OSS and self hosted does not mean it stays that way.
What if we added a P2P element so we could share our music and own it instead of streaming it? Oh wait, that’s soulseek.
Who keeps posting this? This feels inches away from a monetized subscription service.
You have a permissions issue with pg_logical/snapshots": Permission denied. Check that your volumes exist in /var/lib/docker/container (or something close) and that the user running docker can create a test file in the local directory (likely a db directory in the docker root)
What’s your docker-compose.yml look like? Especially any volume mounts
Kind of, yeah. That’s why I replied with it.
Not seeing any of these papers you’re referring to. I’ll re-engage with this when you can provide sources and not personal anecdotes or opinion.
could try a flask webapp
from flask import Flask, send_from_directory import os app = Flask(__name__) # Specify the directory you want to share SHARED_DIRECTORY = 'shared_files' @app.route('/files/<path:filename>', methods=['GET']) def get_file(filename): """Serve a file from the shared directory.""" try: return send_from_directory(SHARED_DIRECTORY, filename) except FileNotFoundError: return "File not found", 404 @app.route('/') def list_files(): """List files in the shared directory.""" files = os.listdir(SHARED_DIRECTORY) files_list = '\n'.join(files) return f"<h1>Files in {SHARED_DIRECTORY}</h1><pre>{files_list}</pre>" if __name__ == '__main__': app.run(host='0.0.0.0', port=5000)