Keep multiple reliable (and tested) backups, if something fails restore a backup.
Don’t rely on any storage, RAID or anything else to be recoverable when something goes wrong.
Keep multiple reliable (and tested) backups, if something fails restore a backup.
Don’t rely on any storage, RAID or anything else to be recoverable when something goes wrong.
Backrest is also great, just a nice webUI for Restic.
FolderSync is a good alternative, more battery friendly too!
I would go with a managed Nextcloud provider, it’s such a pain to manage self hosting Nextcloud specifically.
Be extra vigilant with your backups though, free stuff always has a higher chance of weird stuff happening, once they just removed my VPS after my trial ended and told me to re-create it.
Dynamic DNS is free generally, for example if you put your domain on Cloudflare or another DNS host with an API that is supported you can just update the A records automatically on IP change.
Outgoing should already allow everything, so no need to specifically allow it.
Make sure you’re creating a block rule specifically on outgoing in that case.
Is wireguard incoming or outgoing from the machine you’re trying to block it on?
Do you have something listening on port 52038 that will respond to a port scan? If not it will report as closed.
Annoying that it doesn’t give more details!
I think you might need to add your site to google search console to see more details on specifically why it was listed as unsafe.
Some info here: https://web.dev/articles/use-search-console
Probably due to their status as a privacy friendly way to have a domain they get a lot more fraud and scams using their services, they’re probably dealing with tons of this stuff daily. Being flagged by google safe browsing most of the time means something isn’t right, but I’m not sure what they would really be able to investigate on their end.
Have you figured out why you were flagged? I’ve seen similar stuff from self hosters before where they have a compromised service exposed to the internet and didn’t realize it.
Does it transcode the uploads for better remote viewing like Peertube does? I can’t tell from the github page. This looks a lot simpler to run than peertube since all I really do is share clips with friends.
I don’t think sharing 100Mbps+ 3440x1440 files from shadowplay is going to go well when sharing to friends that have more limited internet speeds.
How would find out about anything if no one posted their projects anywhere?
Might be worth looking around if you can find a used Eaton enterprise model locally, they’re much better quality than APC and similar ones.
This post does have useful info about the recent changes, it might be considered advertising but at least it’s good advertising.
Njalla is more private because they own your domain and just allow you rights to use it, the downside is you have less control over things.
Still would be nice if their support was better.
Did your domain come up as flagged on google safe browsing?
Yeah I would not be exposing stuff like Linkding to the public internet unless I really wanted to spend the time to isolate the server and networking, and really make sure it’s locked down.
Njalla is more private because they actually register the domain themselves, and just allow you rights to edit the settings.
It’s quite different from a typical registrar like Cloudflare where you actually are directly registering the domain yourself.
Software RAID is generally better in every way, also no hardware to fail.