A random person on lemmy. Banner art from Deemo switch version
Alt lemmy @Deemo@lemmy.world
Alt kbin: @Deemo@fedia.io
FMHY (archive): @Deemo@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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Update the stable client does have proper virtual file sync.
Regarding the previous virtual file sync system (.nextcloud) you had to enable experimental features to get it. The latest stable just has both versions of syncing and I missed the obsious vfs sync option.
The only downside to the new system is there isn’t a make file/folder available offline always option in the context menu (you can get around this by manually setting up synced folders but it is a little inconvient).
Nextcloud desktop client 3.13.0
Edit 2:
You need to grab the release from https://github.com/nextcloud-releases/desktop/releases/tag/v3.13.0
Specifically the vfs version Nextcloud-3.13.0-macOS-vfs.pkg
brew doesn’t really work
This is how it shows up for me on Nextcloud desktop client 3.13.0
It sorta does. Nextcloud creates a list of placeholder files with a .nextcloud extension and when you open it nextcloud will auto download the realfile and open it.
Unfortunatly like syncthing nextcloud mac app also has the same file extension sync issue (they use .nextcloud).
Just checked, it’s working fine for me Seadroid: 3.0.0 (from fdroid) Server: 11.0.8 Pixel 8 android
I had the googlw play store version which was 1 year out of date. Reinstalling from fdroid fixed the issue.
Edit: seafile doesnt seem to play nice with microsoft word android. I can open files just fine using the browse tab but can’t save files
Sorry about that (didn’t think that far when making the post 🫠 ).
I updated the title
remote UI connection passes through the Home Assistant Central servers, the Central servers could maintain that safety database and off switch
I think this is how home assistant handles it. When they put out a cve they can update the insecure version list which makes nabucasa refuse remote forwarding (until you update).
Initially I was just thinking if a open-source project is on github and uses the security disclosure feature if it would be possible to pull data from it and disable remote acess (either by auto shutting down the service or simply disabling routing on a reverse proxy).
Having a system that does without a security disclosure list from a project maintainer would be far mor difficult like having the proxy disable one of your services if it detects a vulnerability in a dependency.
data source for these vulnerabilities
Are you refering locations for vulnerability disclosure or are you more referring to bug bounty?
Personally, I’d just put everything behind a VPN. The attack surface is much smaller.
Fair enough
Beeper did mention the DMCA protection on reverse engineering.
That being said regardles if beeper wins or looses. If apple sues and at the same time breaks beeper mini they could run into financial trouble very quickly.
I do use sponsorblock 😅
Only gripe is your stuck to the web version of youtube (especially on ios).
If you want sponsorblock in the native youtube app you have to side load a mod which means either dealing with apple’s 7 day limit refresh or paying for a apple dev acount/ signing service subscription.
Android there is revanced (no sideloading subscriptions needed).
On a final note I am considering trying https://grayjay.app/
It bundles odessy, nebula, youtube and a few other platforms in one app (it also includes sponsorblock and return dislikes for youtube).
I know this isn’t YouTube’s fault but one thing that bugs me about yet premium is when creators dump baked in ads.
As a user you have 3 options:
Now the one exception to this is nebula where like YouTube you pay an all access fee but no baked in ads (I pay for this currently).
I do wonder if creators had the option to make videos available via YouTube premium only (say early access and no baked in ads). Would more people pay and would creators use this system? (They wouldn’t have to worry about demonetization).
Curious on your thoughts
The problem comes down to education institutions. I remember when we got Chromebooks in my highschool (8 years ago) admins forgot to turn of developer mode and half the school unenrolled the Chromebook managing to bypass all restrictions. This went on for half a year until one day our school needed to run a state exam (more for measure of schools performance not as a college entrance exam or anything).
The computerized testing program required deploying a specific chrome app accessible when chrome book is logged out (can’t just download from chrome web store). When they tried to push the client since half of Chromebooks were unenrolled it failed. This required the school it to recall pretty much all chrome books to manually re enroll all of them and disable developer mode (prevents unenrolling and prevents sideloading Linux).
Problem is if older Chromebooks are used for Linux in an educational environment there would be nothing stopping a student from whipping up a bootable USB and dumping another distro (bypassing restrictions). I’m also not sure if there is a enrollment mode equivalent Linux (there may be but not sure).
At least that’s my two cents (not a school it admin just a memory from the past 😉).
Update regarding virtual files has more quirks.
Also turns out the reason it was a github release was it is still in alpha 😅 .