@john I think they had one (supposedly minor) breach. I figure syncing Keepass dbs around at least requires me to be a specific target, rather than end up as chum in the water if there's a big Lastpass breach.
Wow, if you have access to a running ubuntu laptop, and you put it in suspend mode, and then remove the hardware, you can just log on to the running system afterwards (no password needed) and look at every still open/cached application, extract passwords kept in RAM (full disk encryption, anybody?), etc. It's been wontfixed for a couple of months: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/unity/+bug/1777415
@jalcine Hey, thanks for looking into this! You're talking about the "pure" reminders tho? Not attached to any event? Sorry to ask, it's just that literally everybody I've talked to about this thinks I mean reminders for events, which I don't 😅
@RussSharek I'm using KeepassXC on desktop and probably KeepassDX on mobile, though I haven't fully decided the latter.
I want to figure out how to make a ramdisk on Android and download the db manually only when needed so it never touches flash on my mobile device, but I probably don't have the energy for now.
@hirojin Yup. I'm trying LineageOS + microG (replaces Google Play Services) + hostfile-based as blocking and so far only 3 apps out of a few dozen are misbehaving...
tired: Google Voice wired: SIP VOIP from a good mom n' pop inspired: a co-op that provides SIP VOIP and a nice skinned app, so we can stop feeding Google and/or Apple and/or our carrier all our fucking call metadata
Does somebody have some good reading material on distributed/federation systems written for developers? I'm currently in the planning phase of making an FOSS alternative to Thingiverse using federated servers, but no clue where to start. #3dprinting#developers#federation
docker pull registry.lollipopcloud.solutions/arm64v8/pixelfed:latest will get you revision 6c2ead051660419099f9b21364d37c7f7584ce1e from the main Pixelfed source repo (aka: the latest version of the code).
We built the fpm docker file as it's more consistent with our existing approach to web applications.
Again: NO documentation will be provided at this time. We are low on free time. We welcome any help if you're interested 😉