somegregariousdude

joined 1 month ago

unfortunately, the American data centers that Hetzner has don’t have any capacity for the type of VPS that I’m interested in. what they do offer for those particular data centers is just entirely too expensive for my budget. That’s why I went with one of the European data centers, as even with the upcoming pricing increase, I’ll be able to actually afford my VPS. Plus, having it outside of American jurisdiction makes me much happier.

Nope, from the West Coast of the United States. Although, for some odd reason, the server wound up being in Helsinki.

OK, on second thought, I might consider go to social and possibly PeerTube as I’ve never been able to find an instance that I can host a channel on successfully. A XMPP/Movim server might be a possibility as well.

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submitted 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) by somegregariousdude@piefed.social to c/selfhosted@lemmy.world
 

Hey all, I know the purists might sneer at me for this, but I just spun up a server via Hetzner so I could run Docker in the cloud. Since my ISP uses CGNAT, my only options for hosting services at home are either via Tailscale Funnel or CloudFlare Tunnel. If you remember my previous post about Yattee, that's not available on the public internet, but was meant for my private use only. The idea behind this new project is hosting things I intend for public access. I'm debating if I'm going to use a domain I already own that ends in the .us TLD or if I should wait until I get paid in a couple of days and buy a new one from Pork Bun that doesn't have the .us TLD and all the potential baggage that carries. Three questions come to mind:

  • How practical is running Portainer on my Docker instance? (I've got it installed, but I'm new to Portainer and Docker for the most part.)
  • Other than Friendica, Mastodon, Matrix, PeerTube and PieFed, what's worth running on a Docker instance with 8 VCPUs, 16GB of RAM and around 300GB of storage?
  • Is there a Matrix room for those wishing to discuss self-hosting, especially via Docker?

Yattee Server is just a YT-DLP based back end for Yattee 2.0 (which is currently only available via TestFlight). Yattee 1.0 was actually pulled by the dev from the App Store because it was out of date and broken. Being blind, I can’t tell you the resolution that videos play in, but at least for me they play smoothly with some rare stuttering. From what I can tell, setting things to proxy the videos Directly through Yattee Server leads to a temporary download that lasts for 24 hours, but the playback is slow to start due to the requirement of the download needing to occur first. Once it does play, then the experience is as I described earlier.

[–] somegregariousdude@piefed.social 10 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) (2 children)

I was having a discussion with a friend of mine from a more conservative part of the country and I happen to mention my set up involving YouTube. The reaction I got from the friend was negative to say the least. He outright accuse me of stealing money from the hands of creators on YouTube by blocking ads and tracking from Google. Am I a little upset at him? Yes, but not enough to end the friendship over something like this.

 

Everyone knows that YouTube is a hot mess when it comes to privacy, and I finally got fed up with having to shell out my hard earned money for YouTube Premium. It wasn't too dificult to find a reasonable solution for my Fedora system... just pop into Gnome Software and install Pipeline. Problem solved there... no tracking, and I only had to deal with the occasional sponsor message in a video. I've also got UBlock Origin, Sponsor Block and Dearrow installed in Fire Fox, so things are solved there too. The problem was my iPhone, and how to work around the ads in YouTube there. Thankfully, a little research lled me to an app/server called Yattee. I found a few guides in their documentation about how to install it (it assumes Docker, but I have Podman on my Fedora system and had to modify some instructions slightly to take SELinux into account), and I successfully got it set up. I did have to connect Yattee to an Invidious instance, but that's quite straightforward to do. Finally, I used Tailscale Serve to create a reverse HTTPS proxy in front of the Yattee server hosted via the Podman instance so I could access the server from the client app on my iPhone regardless of wherever I happen to be. I've tested it out, and despite the client being a beta (v2.x) and the server being fairly new as well, it allows me to enjoy YouTube videos without Google's privacy-invasive BS. Two final notes: 1. The server isn't exposed to the public internet, and is only available over my tailnet. 2. I use a public Invidious instance, but the integration isn't for the actual retrieval of videos (that's handled by the Yattee server, which is YT-DLP based), it's more for search and metadata retrieval. Maybe not a perfect solution, but it does the job I want it to do.

 

Greetings, I'm new around these parts and have been thinking of kicking iCloud/Gmail to the curb as far as email, calendar and contacts go. I currently use both services, but I'm getting tired of being the product, the flood of advertising and the stress that relying on multinational tech companies brings into my life. I've considered switching to either Proton or Tuta for these services, but I'm not sure of what advantages and disadvantages each one brings to the table. My requirements are fairly simple:

  • The service I choose must use end-to-end encryption by default
  • The service I choose must work on iOS, Linux and the web
  • The service I choose must not make it difficult for those contacts of mine not using the chosen service to read any messages I send to them
  • The service I choose must offer a free option so I can get used to using the chosen service
  • The service I choose must offer an option to use a custom domain name if I choose to subscribe to a paid plan as I might want to use the chosen service for any personal domains I own
  • Any applications the chosen service provides must be fully accessible to screen reader users as I am blind and rely on a screen reader to use my devices

What I'd like to know is what are the benefits and drawbacks of both Proton's and Tuta's services, how affordable each option is and what other people's experiences are with each service. Any insight the community can offer would be helpful to me in making this decision.

Thanks in advance for reading this and offering your feedback.

[–] somegregariousdude@piefed.social 4 points 1 month ago (1 children)

I’m a bit of a stickler when it comes to making sure any XMPP server fully supports the full XMPP spec, especially since I’ve had the chance to experiment with a fully compliant server I set up myself.

[–] somegregariousdude@piefed.social 2 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Already got Element X installed, but looking for a reliable Matrix server to join before I commit.

I already have Signal… Agree it’s pretty good, all except that fact it requires a phone number to register an account.

[–] somegregariousdude@piefed.social 3 points 1 month ago (3 children)

I’m familiar with XMPP… I’ve experimented with the latest version of Prosody and Monal as a client before, but since my personal domain ends in .us, it’s probably not the best option to use to host a server.

I’ll probably stick with them til the bitter end, but like you I will bail if they start to enshittify the experience.

[–] somegregariousdude@piefed.social 2 points 1 month ago (7 children)

Well, there goes one of my favorite alternatives to WhatsApp… Looks like I’ll need to find a replacement.

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