550 stretches. Use amsteel.
550 stretches. Use amsteel.
I use pihole. Pihole does not work for sites that serve ads from the same domain, like YouTube
I’m not condoning or promoting piracy here (that’s against the rules, innit?)
Before flaming you should check which community you’re posting to.
Knife < sword < spear < bow < trebuchet
Privacy concerns are a major issue for many people when it comes to using AI language models
Most of these site uses OpenAI’s free API
Free ChatGPT Sites: (No signups, logging in) Note: Always use VPN when accessing these site for privacy.
This author has no clue how any of this works.
If you manage to hijack an airplane using a credit card sized multitool, honestly you should be given that plane and a medal.
Unfortunately most use Libby/Overdrive which puts DRM on the books and only lets you read through their clunky app or kindle.
As others have suggested I would stick to internal only until you’re comfortable. Dealing with automated port scanning from all over the globe is a nightmare if you aren’t running a tight ship, and a collasal headache to deal with if they get in. I started with pihole, jellyfin, and some other simple docker services. Check out linuxserver.io if you go the docker route, they have good prebuilt compose files for you to use and the community has good info on their forums. You don’t need a domain but it’s preferred if you want to host something public-facing. Make sure you have fail2ban configured if you open stuff up to the web, it makes dealing with the automated attacks easier.
Advertisers/Ad Measurement Companies: We may share information collected from or about you with Advertisers and/or Ad Measurement Companies to select advertisements, and measure and improve advertising effectiveness. As a reminder, please see the Information from Other Sources section above if you have questions regarding the role of Advertisers or Ad Measurement Companies.
From https://help.netflix.com/en/legal/privacy
They’re definitely sharing the info externally.
This site says Netflix tracks 0% of your data. If that were true they’d have no clue who watches what. Something is fishy.
Raspberry pi/small NUC with a screen, in a digital kiosk mode. Just load a static html file with some js to update the clock. No keyboard, no touch input, no way to break it. Connect to it via ssh over tailscale or wireguard VPN to update the HTML with the notes you’d like to display. This way if internet goes down, the clock still works and whatever was displayed wrt messages stays displayed, and you don’t have to worry about the increased overhead of home assistant changes or updates breaking things. It will remain consistent since it’s just HTML and js. If you want less technical family members to be able to update the display…idk, seems like a headache.