What do they mean “trapped”? Is it a bad thing? Does it have any effect on anything earth-related? Is earth being held there by an unknown force?
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Wow. I have never heard this argument articulated in this way. Thanks!
Yes. That’s fair. It’s an actual, realistic threat. But personally, I don’t provide any services to anyone and my data is periodically backed up to my NAS and cloud. But that’s me. I can imagine other scenarios that would definitely require SELinux.
No. I mean why wouild anyone target me? I am behind my home router most of the time, without any exposed ports. I am not saying “SELinux is unnecessary”. The post asked for my reasons to dislike.
I really don’t see how anyone can install malware on my computer. I know my way around computers enough to not do anything dumb. Of course if someone wanted, they would be able to hack my device, probably. But I am not a high value target and it would be a waste of their time and effort. In short, that’s a risk I am willing to take :)
It’s an unnecessary layer of complexity. I am the only user of my personal laptop. I don’t need fine-grained permissions. Linux users and groups are enough for any permission needs I might have, like docker group, audio and video groups, etc. I don’t have any “classified” documents on my computer. My home directory and root are on different disks. I can easily format and reinstall my system if something goes wrong and keep all my personal data.
Yeah. I stopped watching her long ago. But I really like Penrose, so I watched that video for him.
He is a really interesting case. He is a real, actual, published theoretical physicist. But his popular science persona made him a bit weird. For example, in this video, alongside Roger Penrose and Sabine Hossenfelder, he looks like a sci-fi hype-man.
kureta@lemmy.mlto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Best way to manage all my services as containers?English
3·25 days agoLooks nice but what kind of license is that?
I am also just a hobbyist, so that was a genuine question. Thanks for the answer.
Am I doing something wrong? All my services are grouped in docker compose files. Containers that have to communicate internally - a server and it’s db for example - are on their own private docker network. A reverse proxy has its ports 80 and 443 open and it is on an external docker network. Services that I need to access from the outside are on this network and they do not have any ports open. Except for the torrent client, which has a UDP port open.
We have been doing that for centuries.
kureta@lemmy.mlto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Best reverse proxy with ACME to run in dockerEnglish
2·3 months agoI use Zoraxy and it is great if you like GUIs.
Iam not sspecifically talking about this example and I am not trying to imply this tissue has any sort of consciousness but if “foundational research” means “man made horrors beyond my comprehension” maybe we need to find another way, and if we cannot, maybe we just shouldn’t torture conscious beings in the name of science and progress.
Yes, but no.
As you’re well aware, no telescope on Earth can see the leftover descent stages of the Apollo Lunar Modules or anything else Apollo-related. Not even the Hubble Space Telescope can discern evidence of the Apollo landings. The laws of optics define its limits.
kureta@lemmy.mlto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•How many containers are you all running?English
3·4 months ago
kureta@lemmy.mlto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•How many containers are you all running?English
3·4 months ago61 containers in 26 docker files.
kureta@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•I just found out my fiancee wants to switch to linux, lets start a distro war, what should be her first? + other questions
12·8 months agoGNOME is great for Mac refugees. Fedora might do.

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