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Joined 11 months ago
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Cake day: February 3rd, 2024

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  • Do you use bash? If not, which one do you use? zsh, fish? Why do you do it?

    Mostly fish, because it just feels much more modern than bash, it has good built-in autocomplete and I don’t have to install millions of plugins like of zsh.

    Do you write #!/bin/bash or #!/bin/sh? Do you write fish exclusive scripts?

    #!/usr/bin/env bash Occasionally I also write fish scripts. Just replace sh with fish.

    What should’ve people told you what to do/ use?

    zoxide

    general advice?

    As @crispy_kilt@feddit.de already suggested, use shellcheck.

    is it bad practice to create a handful of commands like podup and poddown that replace podman compose up -d and podman compose down or podlog as podman logs -f --tail 20 $1 or podenter for podman exec -it “$1” /bin/sh?

    I don’t think so






  • EpicVision@monero.towntoSelfhosted@lemmy.worldCloud Hosted VMs
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    10 months ago

    As far as I can see on their website, they don’t mention end to end encryption or zero-knowledge encryption. If that is true, it means that they are able to read all your emails (and so can the government if they order them to reveal the data). They sometimes use some pretty confusing marketing slag in general. It’s misleading because they advertise things like in-transit TLS encryption, which is standard nowadays. Even Gmail, Outlook, iCloud, Yahoo and other mainstream email providers have this by default. This is nothing special and they hope that people think it means the same as E2EE. If you care about data ownership, you should also care about (end-to-end) encryption. Only when you are the only key holder, you can be sure that no one can access your private stuff.









  • EpicVision@monero.towntoSelfhosted@lemmy.worldCloud Hosted VMs
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    10 months ago

    I wouldn’t actually selfhost email, it’s not particularly easy and there are many issues you will probably encounter. I recommend ProtonMail, it’s $3.50/month if you only need email and for $8/month you also get calendar, cloud storage, a password manager and a great VPN. Also, they are very focused on privacy and encryption and their apps are open source. Alternatively you can go with IVPN or Mullvad, both are great. Digitalocean has been fine in my experience, have you had any issues with it?