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_cryptagion [he/him]
_cryptagion [he/him] @ _cryptagion @lemmy.dbzer0.com
Posts
1
Comments
1,185
Joined
8 mo. ago

  • Ah, I see. I triggered you by calling you lazy, so you turned around and called me lazy. Well played, liberal. Well played.

  • What the fuck are you talking about, you idiot? You advocate for racist wage slavery for the “free market”, then call me a capitalist as an insult? Are you some kind of very confused AnCap? Or just a particularly stupid liberal?

  • Oh no, those poor white Americans, we wouldn't want to subject them to the near slavery conditions they've been subjecting immigrants to! That would be so tragic!

  • Yeah, well then I'm sure I'll see you out there, won't I? Or are you gonna continue the racist tradition of near slave labor you grew up with?

  • I already work 12/hr days for little pay. So instead of asking Mexicans why they aren't picking your food, why don't you get out there yourself and stop relying on immigrants to feed you?

  • They're rounding up Mexicans at farms, for a start. Besides, if you're the one eating the food, it should be you out there busting your back. Why do immigrants have to do everything for you?

  • Even if they paid $25/hour, most white Americans are too lazy to get in the fields.

    EDIT: Really triggered the white folks with this one, didn't I? Oh, you poor, poor little things.

  • Well, they have access to logs showing who connects to 24 million websites, how they use those websites, and for how long. So if there’s anyone who knows what traffic is crawlers, and which crawlers are AI, it’s Cloudflare. There’s no way they wouldn’t know, they have all the data they would ever need to figure it out. In fact, there’s nobody on the internet who is better positioned to be able to identify AI crawlers than Cloudflare.

  • Keep in mind, in some cases it's harder to hack an individual, especially if they are the slightest bit security conscious. Big corporations often use outdated software, sometimes painfully so. It's not really uncommon to hear about corporations using software that has been abandoned for decades. Meanwhile, your laptop and cell phone automatically update. Meaning, there's a chance you are a little more secure than your average corporation.

  • Nah, I get it. I've held on to certain products or services before because I liked them for a specific purpose, even when people tried to get me to switch to others. And it's not like Karakeep is the wrong choice, it does what you're using it for very well. Until the whole trademark/copyright crisis recently, I used it too. I only switched to Linkwarden when the future of the project was maybe in doubt.

  • It’s over man. You’re certified expert yapper but that’s not going to convince me or anyone else here that you know what you’re talking about.

    Is this Reddit? When were we supposed to be seeking the validation of random strangers on the net, especially ones who brag about their bona fides like it's a CoD lobby? You keep saying it's over, but for some reason you keep coming back here to try to get the last word. If I'm in a position of weakness, why is it you're the one trying so hard? You're in a dick measuring contest against yourself. I'm getting second-hand embarrassment.

  • I ported my data from Hoarder/Karakeep around the time of their copyright crisis, and I've loved the software so far.

  • Why would you say Karakeep is more for data preservation than Linkwarden? Doesn't Linkwarden has all the features that Karakeep has, and more?

  • Yeah, some random nobody trying to convince people they're a cybersecurity expert is gonna be what shuts me up.

    I very clearly laid out my setup, and how you were wrong. If you can't even read well enough to understand that, let alone form som kind of actual argument backed up by reality, that isn't my problem to deal with.

    I would say stick to your own day job, but if this is actually your day job then maybe check out whether your local Burger King has openings, you'll do less harm there.

  • If you were any good at reading, you would know that I said those rules protect the Authelia login page. They don't protect the Jellyfin service or its login page at all. The Jellyfin instance is not behind anything except Cloudflare. I stated that in my very first message. Removing those rules would have no effect whatsoever on Jellyfin.

  • Whoa whoa whoa. What malicious attempts?

    I said it would block all malicious attempts. I didn't say the people trying to access my services were malicious. Clearly the OP is worried about that. I however, having just the meager experience of, you know, actually fucking running the a Jellyfin server, am not. But I'm also not trying convince people I'm a smug cybersecurity expert with a decade of experience.

  • Yes they are. The idea that they’re not would be a statistical wonder.

    Guess I’m a wonder then. I’ve always thought of myself as pretty wonderful, I’m glad to hear you agree.

    Are you logging into your Authelia login page 2k times a day? If not, I suspect that some (most) of those are malicious lol.

    That’s 2k requests made. None of them were served. Try to keep up.

    Well I am an expert with over a decade of experience in cybersecurity, but I’m not acting like an expert here, I’m acting like somebody with at least a rudimentary understanding of how these things work.

    Then I guess I should get a career in cybersecurity, because I obviously know more than someone with over a decade of supposed experience. If you were worth whatever your company is paying you in wages, you would know that a rule blocking connections from other countries, and also requiring the request for the login page come from one of the services on your domain, will block virtually all malicious attempts to access your services. Such a rule doesn’t work for a public site, but for a selfhosted setup it’s absolutely an easy option to reduce your bandwidth usage and make your setup far more secure.

  • No, they are actively trying to get in right now. If you have Authelia exposed they’re brute forcing it.

    No, they aren't. Just to be sure, I just checked it, and out of the over 2k requests made to the Authelia login page in the last 24 hours, none have made it to the login page itself. You don't know jack shit about what's going on in another persons network, so I'm not sure why you're acting like some kind of expert.