

They need everyone to embrace it because they need to justify the insane amounts of money they’ve sunk into this stupid bullshit.
Just a guy. Just a fella. Subject to say silly stuff.
Alternatively @marighost@lemmy.zip.
Formerly @marighost@lemm.ee.


They need everyone to embrace it because they need to justify the insane amounts of money they’ve sunk into this stupid bullshit.
Did you need multiple communities for what look to be the same subject?


Happy Friday!


Microsoft believes the issue may be related to the Samsung Share application, although the exact cause has not yet been confirmed.
30percentofcodewrittenbyai.jpeg


Sounds like a really good way to keep your mind fresh after a traumatic event like a stroke. It’s important to keep your mind busy. Glad to hear you’re doing well, and thanks for sharing :)
No link, no additional information, brand new account, aigen image.
Yup, it’s slop.


I’d like to spin up Jellyfin, but Plex has tv apps for the non techies in my group ;/


Regarding CGNAT and Port Forwarding: I too am behind CGNAT with my ISP, and my solution to this is renting a cheap VPS (I use Contabo, others might have different recommendations) and installing Pangolin. It’s a tunneling software that uses some UDP fuckery to hole-punch straight through the network with their Newt tunnels. I use this so my friends and family can access my Plex and Overseerr requests.
I agree. I’d prefer to have something right here on piefed.
Cool idea. Might have some crossover with selfhosting, which isn’t a bad thing.


I agree with your post 100% I think. Removing oneself from big tech/data services like Google and Microsoft is resisting the regime. It’s especially useful for folks that may not be able to get out and protest, meet with their representatives, etc.
As for me, I’m running my *arr/media stack for myself and my close friends and family. Fuck Disney, Netflix, and Paramount. For our household, HomeAssistant keeps the lights on and SyncThing backs up our files to the NAS.


I figured it out!!
It was simple. I just told Plex to allow the 172.18.0.0/24 subnet. It’s always something simple huh.
Thanks for pointing me at the logs. Sometimes it all looks like gibberish when you’re learning, then you stop and read and search. Have a wonderful evening! (and the 10000 years of excellent luck, too!)


The only logs from Pangolin are from me accessing https://overseerr.dom.tld/. From Plex’s GUI console though, I get this:
Request: [172.18.0.2:46974 (WAN)] GET / (6 live) #18eb GZIP Signed-in
Completed: [172.18.0.2:46974] 401 GET / (6 live) #18eb GZIP 0ms 464 bytes (pipelined: 1)
That 172.18.0.2 is the IP of the Newt container (that subnet is its bridge network, anyway). So it’s making some request to Plex and receiving a 401?
From Mozilla:
The HTTP 401 Unauthorized client error response status code indicates that a request was not successful because it lacks valid authentication credentials for the requested resource.
So what would cause Plex to throw a 401?


Looks like a good resource to read, thanks! As you may know there are a billion and one guides for doing the same thing across a plethora of systems, and even more variables in between. Appreciate your time.


The few times I do use curl, all I can think of is this sketch. Glad there are some TR fans here too 😁
I don’t mean to add to the discourse here or to keep giving you hypotheticals but, while learning to self host is fun and cool, you really do not want this thing on public Internet. Even if you can delete files to prevent uncouth things, what if someone uploads something while you’re asleep, or away from your computer? Do you have others monitoring the instance to take down CSAM or other illegal material? What if someone uploads malware and it executes on your machine? If you must leave it exposed, you should allow only family and friends to access via a strongly passworded account(I think that is configurable with copy party).
If you really want to expose services, try a media server like Plex or Jellyfin. You don’t want strangers to upload things to your machines.


Thanks for this info.


I specified locally hosted/managed because we’d like to avoid clouds and subscriptions. I don’t really want to divulge details but this is mostly for home security against a specific individual, and this person might be inclined to attempt logins into a cloud service. From my end I’d just set up a wireguard tunnel and us it to remote into some kind of server/NVR at my sister’s house.


I hadn’t heard of Tapo, and while TP-Link scares me a little, it looks like it could also be integrated into Home Assistant for viewing. Does the camera record over the first-recorded data when the SD Card gets full? Do you use the TP-Link/Tapo app for local management? Thanks for your response.
!asklemmy@lemmy.world or !casualconversation@piefed.social probably. But it would be wise to include some basic details, like what country you live in so someone might link you to relevant resources. I know you’re desperate but spamming the same message into unrelated communities won’t gain you any favor.