Skip Navigation

User banner
Posts
14
Comments
43
Joined
3 mo. ago

Privacy @lemmy.ml

Starmer is gone, but the "Vicious Circle" of surveillance remains.

  • The UK PM has just announced an under-16 social media ban.

    This is the 'Trojan Horse' in action. You cannot enforce a ban without an Age Verification layer, and you can’t have Age Verification without a National Digital ID or biometric database. They are using the 'child safety' card to build a mandatory surveillance gate for the entire internet.

    Between the new taxes and the constant bans, it’s clear this government has zero respect for personal agency or digital sovereignty. If you aren't already moving your data off the cloud and into your own home lab, start now. The gap between our current society and a total surveillance state just got a whole lot smaller.

  • Those are solid resources but I built mine specifically for the folks who don't want to pipe a remote bash script into their shell during a malware outbreak. My goal was simple, a private way to audit the list without needing to clone a repo or install Python dependencies.

    Use the forensics scripts if you’re a power user, but if you just want a quick, client-side check that doesn't touch your filesystem, that's what the tool is there for.

  • Linux @lemmy.ml

    Privacy-focused AUR Malware Audit Tool (Atomic Arch Incident)

    Privacy @lemmy.ml

    The “Nude” Ultimatum: Privacy is Dead

  • You're right, I missed that.

    I personally use a reverse proxy and Wireguard setup to access remotely.

  • I have a dedicated VPS with reverse proxy connected to my network via Wireguard. It acts as the front door to my network so I don't have to port forward or rely on Cloudflare etc. I used to use Tailscale as the go between but switched to WG recently. Both work fine for streaming content whilst self-hosting all other services including my website.

  • Selfhosted @lemmy.world

    Why I moved my Plex library to Jellyfin after 14 years

  • My bad, GOG is absolutely the gold standard for DRM-free ownership. Personally, I buy on Steam for the convenience and the Proton support but I still collect every free titles on GOG

  • It’s why I treat everything cloud-based as a rental now. If I can't install it locally and back up the data myself, I don't really own it.

  • Technology @lemmy.world

    The Luna Deadline: industry problem, not just Luna

  • The home server is an old, low-powered mini PC running Debian. It acts as the bridge between the WireGuard tunnel and my local LAN.

    I've just finished migrating one of my AdGuard Home instances onto it today. Its role is now twofold:

    Routing: It has ip_forward enabled and a bit of NAT (iptables/nftables) so that traffic arriving from the VPN can actually "hop" onto the local network to reach my other VMs and containers.

    DNS: It provides ad-blocking for the tunnel. VPN clients point to this node's internal WireGuard IP for DNS queries.

    Technically, it's just another WireGuard peer, but with AllowedIPs configured to advertise my 192.168.x.x subnet back to the hub (VPS2). This is what allows  VPS1 and my mobile devices to resolve and reach home services without a single open port on my router.

  • You're right, and for a lot of people, one VPS is the sensible choice. I actually addressed this in the post:

    "VPS1 is my web-facing server. It handles the public side of things. VPS2 is the VPN hub. At first glance, that probably looks unnecessary. Strictly speaking, it is unnecessary. I could have crammed WireGuard onto VPS1 and called it done. But splitting the roles makes the whole thing cleaner.

    One machine serves public traffic. The other handles VPN duties. That means fewer networking compromises, fewer chances of Docker or firewall rules becoming annoying, and a clearer separation between the public-facing stack and the private tunnel. It also means I can change one side without poking the other with a stick and hoping nothing catches fire."

  • It's not that I didn't like it, I just wanted to back to basics! A simple config file on each machine, job done

  • Exactly that, VPS2 handles the WireGuard port and has no domain pointing to it, so it’s basically hiding in plain sight. VPS1 holds the domain and handles the web traffic.

    I keep SSH open on both, but locked down (key-based auth + restricted to my IPs).

    Your idea of using the provider firewall (Ionos in my case) as a “mechanical” lock is a good one, block it at the edge and only open it when needed. I’ve thought about doing that, but I’m generally happy relying on a hardened SSH config and the provider’s KVM if everything goes sideways.

  • Thank you for the heads up, turns out it was the custom html code in the code blocks causing the issue. Fixed now.

  • Selfhosted @lemmy.world

    Replacing Tailscale with a 2-VPS WireGuard setup (No port forwarding)

  • No, apt isn’t just a rename. apt upgrade largely replaces apt-get upgrade, but it’s a bit more aggressive: it may install new packages if required as dependencies (it still won’t remove packages). If an upgrade needs to remove packages to resolve dependencies, use apt full-upgrade (same as apt-get dist-upgrade).

  • dist-upgrade and full-upgrade are essentially the same command but yeah, I won't be using apt upgrade again in the future! Like I said in my post, the joys of being self taught is that you learn by my making mistakes and that's part of the "fun" 🤣

  • Glad you found it useful. I'm the same, I can't stand those long posts that make you read a life story before getting to the commands, even worse when a page is riddled by ads or behind a paywall!

    I figured if I’d missed it, a few other people probably had too.

  • Linux @lemmy.ml

    Turns out I have been updating wrong all this time! 🤦🏼

    General Discussion @lemmy.world

    Do you still use Github

    homelab @lemmy.world

    Hypervisor, VM, LXC and Docker: A Simple Guide

  • Toss up between Star Trek First Contact and Snatch!

  • I don't know if it has been audited or not to be honest but I know the source code is available on the Mega website.

    I have not come across Cryptomator but that is now something I am definitely going to look into, I am always doing an audit on software I use and always looking to see what else is out there. Just because I use Mega at the moment doesn't mean that is what I will be using in a year from now etc

  • Fossify messages. Not the most feature filled app, does only the basics but because I don't use SMS as my main communication method it is more enough to receive the odd 2FA text

  • Since they publish their client-side source code (https://mega.io/developers), anyone can verify that the encryption actually happens locally on your device before a single byte is uploaded.

    Unlike Google or Microsoft where you just have to hope they aren't scanning your files for ads or AI training (which they are!) Mega's transparency means if there was a backdoor in the client code, the FOSS community would have flagged it years ago, it gives independent researchers a chance to check the behaviour. As an offsite backup is crucial, for me Mega is one of the better providers, not saying they are perfect but good enough for now.

  • Browsers @lemmy.ml

    A week with Brave Origin Nightly.

    Linux @lemmy.ml

    Reclaiming the desktop: Why I’m still on Linux in 2026

    Linux @lemmy.ml

    Is the "Year of Linux" actually a trap?

    Privacy @lemmy.world

    BrowserGate: Technical breakdown of LinkedIn’s covert browser extension fingerprinting

    Privacy @lemmy.ml

    Google’s Sideloading Crackdown: Why It’s a Threat to Everyone’s Privacy and Freedom