I’ve never been an avid Reddit user, so on that front it’s very easy to me.
Still, I do interact with some of the other mainstream media.
I’ve never been an avid Reddit user, so on that front it’s very easy to me.
Still, I do interact with some of the other mainstream media.
Society absolutely does have enough vacant homes.
Falling birth rates are very bad, as it leads to a reduced share of productive labor, meaning our kids will have to work more and we may never retire, all other things being equal.
An inheritance tax on such wealth should be 100%
I would be fairly comfortable running a direct WireGuard connection even without Tailscale, but my location and use case simply won’t allow me to.
Your setup is valid, nothing wrong with it, and yes, it is more secure. Just can’t be used in my case.
I mean any connection through these protocols is just not working over the Internet. DPI equipment detects respective packets and cuts the connection, irrespective of the port you assign.
It’s not illegal to use VPN in my area, but connections are blocked on a protocol level, both through OpenVPN and Wireguard.
I already managed to make caddy work, so, hooray!
I also found a setting on my router that fully isolates certain devices from the local network. I want to put the server in there, so that the rest of my LAN is not under threat. I also want to figure out VLANs.
That’s a good piece of advice, but due to several considerations (extreme censorship interrupting VPN connections, family using NAS for automatic backups, and some others) I cannot go that route.
For now I’m only toying around, experimenting a little - and then closing ports and turning my Pi off. I do have my NAS constantly exposed, but it is solidly hardened (firewall, no SSH, IP bans for unauthorized actions, etc. etc.), fully updated, hosts no sensitive data, and all that is important is backed up on an offline drive.
Yep!
For me it’s a sense of reliability and control - my stack will keep working even if new censorship rolls out (I live in a heavily censored and sanctioned jurisdiction), or if there’s a global outage, or whatever else. I am also the sole authority over my piece of the Internet, and no one can do anything to alter it or take it away.
Update: tried Caddy, love it, dead simple, super fast, and absolutely works!
Yep, sharing stuff for others requires more expertise, as I’ll get responsible for other people’s experience. If I screw something up now, only I will be affected.
Thanks for clarification!
For now just some experiments alongside NAS
Planning to host Bitwarden, Wallabag and other niceties on the server, and then when I get something more powerful, spin up Minecraft server and stuff
I’d love to eventually have a 10gbps LAN, yep :)
I’d also love to explore the technology going into cloud gaming, so not only would I launch games using files laying on the server, but could actually play them everywhere from my energy efficient potato laptop :D
But that’s long ahead and more of an “if it even works properly”
In what way? It is a physical server located in my bedroom, sharing resources online.
Drives are somewhat noisy (even though I took fairly quiet ones) and I appreciate total silence at night. Unfortunately, I don’t have many places to put it outside my single room, so there’s that.
I’d love to move to SSDs for storage at some point (I know it’s controversial, but they would fit my use case better), but for now it’s too expensive for me.
As someone from Russia, we have even larger territory, and going by rail is almost twice as cheap as by plane.
High speed rail from Saint Petersburg to Moscow will cost you ~$45, going by plane will set you back ~$75 on the cheapest flight with hand luggage only. Considering the time losses associated with airports, you’ll be at your destination almost as fast for way cheaper, so this option is widely preferred.
Same story with long distance trips - I plan on going for a 1000km trip in July, and train ticket costed me the same $45, while cheapest plane tickets go around $100. It’s also a night train with beds and all, so I have one night accommodation for free while on my way. Depart - have a nice sleep - be on your destination in the morning and have a full day to yourself, fully rested.
If you’re feeling adventurous, you can go all the way from Moscow to Vladivostok by single train for $250. This will take almost a week, but it will get you around half the planet for that money.
Thanks! I got that advice as well, but I would like to keep it self-hosted - I consider using Pangolin on a VPS for that purpose going forward: https://github.com/fosrl/pangolin
Also, beware of the new attack on Cloudflare Tunnel: https://www.csoonline.com/article/4009636/phishing-campaign-abuses-cloudflare-tunnels-to-sneak-malware-past-firewalls.html
The point here is that in many jurisdictions doing charity exempts you from certain taxes, and it is possible to shuffle money around under the disguise of philanthropy while still getting all the financial benefits like an actual charity