Nobody ask this person their thoughts on federal marriage law conventions in the us in the year 2015
pogmommy
Last I used it, it didn't have nearly the functionality that ubo does
I mean, the phrase 'sane defaults' comes to mind
I mean, yeah like another user said, ideally it would be in the interest of groups which allege to have am interest in some form of democracy. But additionally, the ability to set up browsable partial mirrors which could be hosted by miscellaneous nonprofits and individuals both within and outside of the US would be a massive first step to preserving the information that IA stores. The fact that attacks on their servers can eradicate all access to the information they store is troubling given how many enemies they've made simply through the work they do.
That's cool but I'll check back in to see which fascist technocrat is running bluesky in 8 years
I love the IA but they need to be infinitely more decentralized like yesterday
The number of times I've heard that by people expecting it to win them arguments is incredibly discouraging.
I mean, I don't disagree entirely. Once a proper foss smartphone is available and viable for daily use, I fully intend to use it because graphene does have a lot of google dependencies that I consider shortcomings. But if the goal is degoogling, navigation apps from non-google stores is not a particularly high bar to clear at the moment.
I use Grapheneos, though I'm not opposed to suggesting stuff from the play store where foss options don't cut it. I just personally don't feel like they make much sense in a post in a degoogling community
I had that problem when i first started using jellyfin- I would have to give my users some sort of default login which I couldn't trust them to actually go and change within jellyfin. And then when someone forgot their password, they'd have to ask me to manually reset their password, and until then they couldn't use their account.
My solution was to use the jellyfin LDAP auth plugin with an lldap docker container, so once I set up my users' accounts, they have to do the password reset process themselves to initially set their password, and the only info I need from them is their preferred username and email address. Makes sure they're familiar with the password reset process as well, and now if I get any questions/support requests related to passwords, I can simply direct them to the lldap password reset page.
It also makes it much easier to offer extra services such as mastodon and NextCloud which support LDAP, so users can manage their logins on all platforms from a central place.
Agreed. Started out in Plex when j knew nothing about self hosting, very quickly made the switch to Jellyfin and haven't looked back. If I'm hosting my media, storing it locally, and running my own server, I'm much better off not integrating the software of some company that feels entitled to bleed some extra revenue from me.
Breast, Thighs, and Ribs For Supper