Runterwählen ist kein Gegenargument.
[Verifying my cryptographic key: openpgp4fpr:941D456ED3A38A3B1DBEAB2BC8A2CCD4F1AE5C21]
Because it was a shameless copy of SMF which is also great.
OpenBSD:
Conclusion: OpenBSD wins
The WTFPL is risky in certain jurisdictions, as it does not have a NO WARRANTY clause.
Do whatever you like with the original work, just don’t be a dick.
Good point, thank you. Uh… beep!
It should be easy to distinguish a bot from a real user though, isn’t it?
How does it defend a website to deny reading access to static content?
Thank you! :-)
The content posted here has no obvious license. I wonder if an administrator could just put any license of his choice on your posts.
I wonder why I don’t pay for Lemmy.
These days, things have greatly improved.
Websites will never change their URLs today.
Again, I’m talking about the server part here, and there is a lot preventing a server to be both a web and a mail server.
You understand that web servers (listening on a web server port) and mail servers (listening on one or more mail server ports, possibly on the same computer) are entirely different technologies?
JMAP sounds interesting indeed, but as far as I understand, there is an underwhelming number of clients that speak it?
A website is the response a web server sends on a web port to a web browser. SMTP on port 80/443 won’t work well, but please try.
If you try it, report back. ;-) My current setup is mostly OpenSMTPD & Dovecot, but I’m open for good reasons to move away.
Websites do not have the functionality to connect to mail servers. These are different protocols.
For mail server infrastructure, Stalwart is said to be pretty good. I haven’t had a chance to try it yet.
My RSS reader (Newsblur) lets me do that too, to some extent.
I guess you use blob-free Linux-libre then?