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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)NO
Posts
12
Comments
265
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • I read through the comments and figured I should try to help balance the discussion. For risk of getting pounced on, I use brave browser and brave search for all my personal needs. It is pre configured with things I care about out of the box, ipfs on mobile, great adblock by default, I experimented with their ad/crypto thing. I’m very happy we have companies trying to do new things, the naysayers will shit on innovation always, so “do your own research” lmao. Other features are a built in crypto wallet.

    Other things I care about are their terms of service. Whether you believe it or not, at least we have a company out there trying to champion privacy by default. DuckDuckGo is similar on that regard. They also have their own search engine and their AI powered answers is very good, much better than Google’s at this point. I find myself not having to go to Google as often anymore. It’s really good these days!

    They also push the envelope and put their money where their mouth is so to speak privacy wise by continually coming out with new features for privacy and security. I honestly do not understand how a privacy community will shit all over Brave. And no I don’t care about their founder nor about their copyright AI infringing API. Have none of you sailed the high seas? If it personally affects you then sue them.

  • How do you have your auth working? Is it basic user/password managed on Nextcloud (external database connected?), is it external auth against something like Okta, or is it user/pass that you define from docker-compose?

    If via docker-compose then a restart would clear anything an attacker would have done and it would reload from the docker-compose process I think? I’m not too familiar with the specifics on that as I’m not a security researcher, but generally some attacks are resident in memory only and a restart can clear them only for it to crop up again later either due to a running process that was set to rerun an exploit or someone monitoring your system externally and retrying the exploit remotely again.

    Or it could just be some bug in Nextcloud or unique to your environment. Personally I’m only hosting things that are internally accessible via VPN anymore. Tailscale makes that super easy these days.

  • Sounds a lot like Netbox, for network management. You can define data centers and racks and equipment and sub equipment as well as the actual network information like what cable is plugged into which port on which device, VLANs, IP addresses, subnets, BPG ASNs, etc.

  • The affiliate links are done by (almost?) every search engine so it’s not fair to single out Brave for it. Note I’m not defending them, if you’re truly up in arms about it talk about all of them doing it.