gobbling871 1y ago • 8%
Time for me to leave Lemmy.world for good.
gobbling871 1y ago • 100%
Yes. But if I wanted to be petty I would have switched over to Gentoo.
gobbling871 1y ago • 83%
Arch is wisdom. Every LTS-type distro is bound to catch issues due to lags and discordance in release cadence and worse of all, distro-specific patches that complicate things and by themselves have the potential to introduce unique CVE's like one I was reading recently about Ubuntu involving OverlayFS.
gobbling871 1y ago • 100%
Necessary for me to fix the "bugs" present in Android (Safetynet fix, F-droid & Aurora auto updates etc.) and some from the OEM (flawed camera libs from Xiaomi that unintentionally hamper the use of Gcam).
gobbling871 1y ago • 100%
As it you can block an entire community from your feed. I don't trust the instance to do any of this on my behalf. This is where things get slippery and instead of just banning hate groups, they'll eventually start banning political communities.
If you really take a look at this. Something like Twitter has done a great job of this such as mass filtering out undesired content by muting keywords.
I really think this is the way to go instead of allowing unappointed admins who are only answerable to themselves to be the judge of what is "good" speech.
gobbling871 1y ago • 100%
Maybe I will end up giving up on lemmy.world and eventually self-hosting my own instance.
gobbling871 1y ago • 100%
Depends on the exceptions but that's anti speech anyway, so not a fan at all unless has to be done.
Am for people individually blocking out content that doesn't align with their values. Personal curation as opposed to mass censorship. Mass censorship opens up a whole can of worms that I personally find too distasteful for my liking. I don't agree with the idea of a walled garden social media.
gobbling871 1y ago • 75%
All of them. Am pro free speech and strongly against censorship.
gobbling871 1y ago • 20%
Cool cool coooool...
gobbling871 1y ago • 28%
No. Federated tools suck and lemmy.world is kind of the last attempt am giving. If it doesn't work, I can just go back to pleb sites.
gobbling871 1y ago • 66%
Have accounts on other lemmies that I don't use but I want to use lemmy.world the way I would use reddit. One account that takes care of my identity.
I'm not creating 20 different accounts on 20 different instances.
gobbling871 1y ago • 33%
It's a stupid point from my perspective. Can't just jump from every Lemmy instance whenever they do stupid shit.
Besides federated tools are already hard to use as they are. Might not be worth the trouble in the long run if censorship is rampant on every big instance.
gobbling871 1y ago • 100%
gobbling871 1y ago • 30%
Everywhere. HN, Twitter, Reddit, Element. If lemmy.world mods make another justification post for de-federating a community they disagree with, it's bye bye Lemmy.
gobbling871 1y ago • 66%
And am expressing my disagreement with it.
gobbling871 1y ago • 100%
Who gets to decide what is permissible content? That's my issue. Not some faceless unaccountable to anyone mods.
Is lemmy.world a place for anyone who wants to have a conversation (within legal/social limits) or not? is the real question here.
gobbling871 1y ago • 50%
BS. I see stuff I don't disagree with all the time on the net. I don't go calling for admins to take them down or refer to the posters as ticks. If you have to grandstand about morals, be real and about something.
gobbling871 1y ago • 76%
Nah. It's a (biased) personal interpretation of what "good" "safe" "family-friendly" content means for lemmy users. Idk much about Hexbear's content but isn't it possible to label their posts as NSFW incase of visibly violent content or something similar.
The users who disagree with Hexbear's overall comments know where the block button is. It's not that complicated a solution. People should use more of it instead of looking for reasons to get mad.
gobbling871 1y ago • 57%
Says who? Do you think you own lemmy.world?
Oracle responds to Red Hat
Basically have watchtower monitor and update containers whenever new images are released. I've recently noticed that with searxng (using redis as db), hosted through nginx proxy manager, will have a steady downtime of about 15mins post update then come back online. This is extremely frequent for searxng's case as I have watchtower run every day and my preferred way of running most of my containers is with the latest tag. The way out of this downtime in my experience is a restart of NPM which brings back the searxng service. I'm looking for a way to automate a restart of the NPM container after a successful update of searxng's container. I have checked the docs for watchtower, and the lifecycle hooks (a way to run sh scripts pre/post update) are able to run only from the applied container and not from the host system.