What a bad take. Do you also think the Seven Samurai movie shouldn’t be in a museum because it’s not IMAX?
Waryle
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Waryle@jlai.luto Linux@programming.dev•Hyprperks: a new 5€ official subscription to support Hyprland development.12·16 days agoYou can’t use Netflix without paying, it’s a subscription. You can use Hyprland without paying anything, you pay because you’re willing to support the project, it’s a donation.
just $10/
monthyear
Waryle@jlai.luto Games@lemmy.world•Ubisoft says you "cannot complain" it shut down The Crew because you never actually owned it, and you weren't "deceived" by the lack of an offline versionEnglish1·4 months agoYou needlessly want to punish tens of thousands of people for the acts of a few hundred. It’s cruel, pointless and very damaging, and your tirades from a high-school essay only support the shallowness and immaturity of your thinking. I won’t waste any more time on you.
Waryle@jlai.luto Games@lemmy.world•Ubisoft says you "cannot complain" it shut down The Crew because you never actually owned it, and you weren't "deceived" by the lack of an offline versionEnglish11·4 months agoYou want to use the “throw everybody out and see what happens”, and you claim how much better things would be under your governance.
You’re talking like a Elon Musk wanna-be, even using shitty metaphors that mask all the complexity of the problems, and the cruelty that these kinds of decisions imply.
You want to throw 20k employees out without any consideration for the economic and personal consequences, not to mention all the other companies around who will see their business sometimes heavily impacted.
All this to make a stupid metaphor. You’re 14 at best.
Waryle@jlai.luto Games@lemmy.world•Ubisoft says you "cannot complain" it shut down The Crew because you never actually owned it, and you weren't "deceived" by the lack of an offline versionEnglish11·4 months agoThe workers, the gamers, and the industry are glad you’re not in charge of anything, punishing them for things they have no control over, and wasting good talents and infrastructure.
Waryle@jlai.luto Games@lemmy.world•Ubisoft says you "cannot complain" it shut down The Crew because you never actually owned it, and you weren't "deceived" by the lack of an offline versionEnglish91·4 months agoNo, make it a entirely employee-owned company, so they can vote the execs out, sanitize the culture, and keep the thousands of worker out of unemployment
Waryle@jlai.luto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•How to harden against SSH brute-forcing?English1·4 months agoYou can look up for:
- Setting up max authentication attemps per connection -> slows up a lot brute force attacks. If your password is strong enough, that’s already a big step to secure your server.
- Generate SSH Keys and disable password authentication -> do this only if you’re connecting through the same devices, because you won’t be able to connect from any device that has not being set up. Personally I don’t use this because I want to be able to access my server even if I’m not home and without my laptop
- Set up Crowdsec -> it’s a local service which scans logs and will block access to any suspicious IPs. It also relies on a crowdsourced list of IPs that are identified as threat and will preventively block them
Waryle@jlai.luto Technology@beehaw.org•I don't know who needs to hear this, but DO NOT EVER expose Jellyfin to the internet0·4 months agoOh you insufferable rawgabbit. Even in the face of definitive proof, the only thing you care about is throwing a 4 paragraphs tantrum trying to twist every single word just to not say “OK, maybe I was wrong on that thing”. I’m out.
Waryle@jlai.luto Technology@beehaw.org•I don't know who needs to hear this, but DO NOT EVER expose Jellyfin to the internet1·4 months agohttps://www.legifrance.gouv.fr/juri/id/JURITEXT000030635061/
Case law from the Cour de Cassation, where the defendant was convicted, by Articles 323-1 and 323-5, of having extracted data freely following a proven failure of the protection system.
The complainant just had to show that the data SHOULD have been inaccessible, by expressing this “with a special warning” :
"3°) alors qu’en l’absence de dispositif de protection des données, la maître du système doit manifester clairement et expressément manifester, par une mise en garde spéciale, sa volonté d’interdire ou de restreindre l’accès aux données ; qu’en déduisant de la seule présence d’un contrôle d’accès sur la page d’accueil du site de l’ANSES que M. X… s’était irrégulièrement maintenu dans le système contre le gré de son propriétaire, la cour d’appel a violé l’article 323-1 du code pénal ;
Translated :
“3°) whereas in the absence of a data protection system, the master of the system must clearly and expressly manifest, by means of a special warning, his intention to prohibit or restrict access to the data; that in deducing from the mere presence of an access control on the home page of the ANSES site that Mr. X… had irregularly maintained himself in the system against the owner’s will, the Court of Appeal violated article 323-1 of the French Penal Code ;
In my case, the first thing you see when you arrive at my Jellyfin instance is a login form blocking your entry, and you have to go through a backdoor to access my data, so there’s no ambiguity on this point.
You’re wrong, period. Stop trying to debate laws interpretation of a country you don’t even speak the language of.
Waryle@jlai.luto Technology@beehaw.org•I don't know who needs to hear this, but DO NOT EVER expose Jellyfin to the internet1·4 months agoI live in France, and these are the relevant laws :
- Article 323-1 : you access my server without my authorization -> 3 years of prison, 100k€ fine
- Article 323-3 : you touch my data in any way -> 5 years of prison, 150k fine
Waryle@jlai.luto Technology@beehaw.org•I don't know who needs to hear this, but DO NOT EVER expose Jellyfin to the internet1·4 months agoUsing a flaw in a software to retrieve data you should not have access to is illegal where I live, the same way as you’re not suddenly allowed to enter my house and fetch my drawers just because I left a window open. I won’t debate this point further.
Waryle@jlai.luto Technology@beehaw.org•I don't know who needs to hear this, but DO NOT EVER expose Jellyfin to the internet0·4 months agoKeeping that copy on a web accessible platform that is accessible by anyone on the internet(unauthenticated) isn’t covered by your rights at a bare minimum.
It’s as accessible as my DVD collection in my living room: anyone can get into my home without a key by illegally breaking a window.
Using a flaw in my Jellyfin to access my content is illegal and can’t be used against me to sue me, period. The idea of rights holders who would hack me to sue me is just plain ridiculous.
Depending on the content “timing” if they trigger on something that doesn’t have a physical/consumer release yet… or all sorts of other “impossible” conditions. This is obviously reliant on what content you actually have on your server.
And again, the only proof they would have could not be used in courts.
For real, you’re just fear-mongering at this point.
I was sincerely hoping someone would bring some real concerns, like how one of these security breaches listed in the OP could allow privilege escalation or something, but if all you got is “Universal might hire hackers to break through your server and sue you”, you’re comforting me in my idea that I don’t have much to fear
Waryle@jlai.luto Technology@beehaw.org•I don't know who needs to hear this, but DO NOT EVER expose Jellyfin to the internet1·4 months agoWhere I live, I have the legal right to have a copy of a film of which I have a legal version, they can watch my media library as much as they want, it’s not enough to prove that it’s illegal.
And hacking my server is illegal, they can’t go to court by presenting evidence obtained through hacking, they would risk much more than me.
Waryle@jlai.luto Technology@beehaw.org•I don't know who needs to hear this, but DO NOT EVER expose Jellyfin to the internet0·4 months agoMy Jellyfin server is behind Cloudflare with IP outside of my country banned.
I got Crowdsec set up on Cloudflare, Traefik and Debian directly.
I got Jellyfin up in a docker container behind Traefik, my router opens only 80 and 443 ports and direct them to Traefik.
Jellyfin has only access to my media files which are just downloaded movies and shows hardlinked by Sonarr/Radarr from my download folder.
It is publicly exposed to be able to watch it from anywhere, and share it to family and friends.
So what? They might access the movies, even delete them, I don’t care, I’ll just hardlink them back or re-download them. What harm can they do that would justify locking everything down?
Waryle@jlai.luto Technology@lemmy.world•After 50 million miles, Waymos crash a lot less than human driversEnglish121·5 months agoSo we can have autonomous metros, buses and taxis that allow people anywhere when they need it so they don’t rely on having a car?
Waryle@jlai.luto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•How would world politics be like if the top 100 countries (in terms of military strength) all had their own nuclear arsenals?2·5 months agoI live 2000km from Chernobyl
Chernobyl is not comparable to a nuclear bomb. Chernobyl is a reactor, made to release a steadily amount of radiations for years to make electricity.
Chernobyl irradiated a large area because the graphite that was located in the reactor core has burned, and the fumes have been carried by the wind, taking a lot of high-level activity nuclear waste hundred or thousands of kilometers away.
A bomb is way smaller than a reactor, and is designed to release most of its energy instantly to make the biggest explosion possible. That means a short burst of radioactivity very high level of radioactivity, with a very small half-life.
A few days after a bomb explodes, most of the radiations would have depleted.
Waryle@jlai.luto Technology@lemmy.world•Android is now warning of Firefox sharing dataEnglish1·5 months agoYou must add the repo first using this link
Nope, it’s a Spotify alternative made in France which emphasize on paying a fair share to the artists and providing a great music quality.