Thanks to both of you, my same thoughts, but I also wanted to hear an outside perspective as I am not so well versed in IPv6. But it sounds reassuring. Shall I also consider exposing some HTTP/S services for media over IPv6 is also relatively safe, as long as I have MFA etc?
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AI should also be taxed proportionally then. And they should be liable and not exempt of copy rights infringements.
filister@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•IBM CEO says there is 'no way' spending trillions on AI data centers will pay off at today's infrastructure costsEnglish
14·14 days agoI believe most of the companies are doing it to inflate their share prices.
filister@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Plex’s crackdown on free remote streaming access starts this week - Ars TechnicaEnglish
91·19 days agoSame. That’s for me a red flag that a company took the enshittification path and things will get progressively worse.
Plus I would rather support an open source project that benefits the whole community than a greedy company who is trying to milk their customers.
filister@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Browser Fingerprinting And Why VPNs Won’t Make You AnonymousEnglish
2·27 days agoYou also need to change the devices browsers, extensions and timezones to stay anonymous or buy a device and set the most common fingerprint settings, so it is harder for those companies to track you down. It is a slippery slope, and you can check your browser fingerprint and avoid adding unique settings, extensions or anything that can help them to track you.
filister@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Microsoft AI CEO pushes back against critics after recent Windows AI backlash — "the fact that people are unimpressed ... is mindblowing to me"English
4·27 days agoWhy is our company valued at 4 trillions instead of 10 trillions. Those peaky humans are not buying enough of our shares. /s
filister@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Bewildered enthusiasts decry memory price increases of 100% or more — the AI RAM squeeze is finally starting to hit PC builders where it hurtsEnglish
1·1 month agoI don’t know but I am constantly hitting the RAM limit with 16Gb of RAM with around 20-30 open tabs and other apps, both on Linux and Windows
filister@lemmy.worldOPto
Linux@lemmy.ml•AMD Officially Confirms The End Of The AMDVLK Driver - Phoronix
4·1 month agoWelcome, glad to be of help.
filister@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•OpenAI signs $38 billion compute deal with Amazon, partnering with cloud leader for first timeEnglish
22·1 month agoThis at the moment is a clear Ponzi scheme.
OpenAI or Nvidia announces some partnership or a deal for X amount of billions. As a result the valuation of the recipient company goes straight to the sky, increasing the market valuation of said company X-times more.
And then try to tell me this isn’t a bubble.
filister@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Google removes Gemma models from AI Studio after GOP senator’s complaintEnglish
11·1 month agoThe future is very small models trained to work in a certain domain and able to run on devices.
Huge foundational models are nice and everything, but they are simply too heavy and expensive to run.
filister@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Google removes Gemma models from AI Studio after GOP senator’s complaintEnglish
201·1 month agoChina right now is leading the way with releasing open weights models. The US lags behind, as they are all more concerned about releasing closed weights commercial models.
filister@lemmy.worldOPto
homeassistant@lemmy.world•Aldi just launched its own £16.99 rival to Ring's battery video doorbell – and it's completely subscription-free | TechRadarEnglish
11·2 months agoIf they do the object recognition on the cloud there is no way they offer those doorbells without any monthly subscription. My guess is that it is either doing something on the device or is just a dumb camera with an RTSP feed without any AI features.
My guess is the latter, considering the price. And still 20 bucks for this doorbell without a monthly subscription is a good deal. If they build something natively supporting Home Assistant that would be a killer device.
But as a friend used to say, if something is free, you are the product.
filister@lemmy.worldOPto
homeassistant@lemmy.world•Aldi just launched its own £16.99 rival to Ring's battery video doorbell – and it's completely subscription-free | TechRadarEnglish
49·2 months agoI agree with you, very little information was provided but I presume this is just Tuya or some similar OEM brand and maybe you can install a local control and cut the cloud part of the equation.
At the moment it is pure speculation on my part, but I am sure there are plenty of smart folks out there who would love to tinker with it and maybe find a way to install some custom firmware to cut the stalkware.
filister@lemmy.worldOPto
homeassistant@lemmy.world•Aldi just launched its own £16.99 rival to Ring's battery video doorbell – and it's completely subscription-free | TechRadarEnglish
35·2 months agoIt would be interesting if it is also compatible with Home Assistant. That could be a really good entry level video doorbell
filister@lemmy.worldOPto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Jellyfin, Traefik and Tailscale Config QuestionEnglish
1·2 months agoThe problem is that I have a couple of services listening on different ports and I want to use the reverse proxy to listen to incoming requests and route the traffic to the corresponding ports. I also want to issue SSL certificates and serve the traffic over TCP port 443.
filister@lemmy.worldOPto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Jellyfin, Traefik and Tailscale Config QuestionEnglish
1·2 months agoYes, I know that, but I just don’t want to remember the port numbers or create some bookmarks.
I think I can create a CNAME record for *.media to point to the Tailscale address of the reverse proxy and then use the reverse proxy with Cloudflare API key to serve SSL certificates from my domain.
I am currently struggling a bit with the setup though.
filister@lemmy.worldOPto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Jellyfin, Traefik and Tailscale Config QuestionEnglish
3·2 months agoI have a registered domain name already, but I am behind CGNAT and I don’t really have a public IP.
I want to allow access to my services remotely only through Tailscale.
I will definitely do that, I just want to finish the whole setup.
I am playing around with Podman Quadlet and that’s one hell of a rabbit hole. I have everything up and running, and now I need to configure the containers, and probably will deal with other pain points, etc.
The good thing is that I have documented the whole process so it is reproducible but it took me quite some time to figure out everything.






True, maybe the best way then is to expose them only within your Wireguard network.