Yeah. Boost itself is great though. Well worth the couple of bucks to get rid of the ads forever.
Yeah. Boost itself is great though. Well worth the couple of bucks to get rid of the ads forever.
Oh, didn’t even know you could do that, lol
Good idea. I get a number of CORS errors - but I also get them without the VPN, so I don’t think that’s it.
The idea that CR doesn’t block me, their content hipster does though - that might have merit. Hm. I have noticed that some sites require me to solve the Cloudflare Captcha. So maybe that happens when requesting the page/stream, and then since I don’t (can’t) solve it, nothing happens?
Do you have an idea how I could verify this? 😅
Awesome. Thanks.
Alright, this is weird. I ran tcpdump
on the server, and checked both physical and wg0
interface. For things like youtube, it’s a constant stream of packets coming in on the physical interface, then immediately being relayed through wg0
- just as it should be.
But for Crunchyroll, there’s… Nothing. I get an initial burst of packets when opening the site containing the video I want to stream, and then packets just stop coming in once the page itself has fully loaded.
I’ve been hosting a personal domain with an established-but-not-large hosting provider for around 6 years, without any troubles sending or receiving mail from that domain (via the provider’s servers, of course).
Does that mean my domain is now well established enough to take email hosting to my own server?
So what are you using it for? (Not criticizing, genuinely curious)
What use is Github / a Github clone to you without knowing git?
Hi,
no, sorry :(
I really don’t think it’s DNS (famous last words, I know)
I don’t have accounts on any other streaming services 😅 YouTube works, though
Do you have a suggestion how to eliminate this as a possibility?
Ah, alright. Yes, I’ve just double checked. The server end of the tunnel provides a dns server, and the client is configured to use that as its only dns server.
I’m able to resolve DNS requests from the device. But maybe I’m misunderstanding your question? 😅
Oh wow, this is literally what I’ve been waiting for.
Edit: OK, it’s not quite there yet.
I’ve been wondering this. I have multiple of the older (non-Dot, the tall, cylindrical ones) Echoes. I hate using them. But I do like the form factor and sound quality.
It probably can’t be too hard to gut everything but the speakers, microphone and DC port, then wire in a Pi / Pi Zero, right…?
Oh, absolutely. In case it wasn’t clear, I’m against chatcontrol.
They don’t actually have to enforce that though. Rather, it’s a neat trick: if you do use encrypted chats, well, you’re purposefully doing something illegal! To hide information, no less! That surely means you have more to hide, and since you’ve already broken a law, let’s investigate further!
To be clear: I’m not saying this is the intended effect. But it is a frighteningly possible one. Anyone who has reason to hide their communication (regime critical activists, opposition politicians, investigative journalists,…) either have to
Why not just use home-manager on arch?
Didn’t know about this, but sounds like a good cause.
Is there any legal risk involved with this? Is it recommended to run behind a VPN?
I wouldn’t count the last switch as distro hopping though. It was a calculated decision after months of deliberation and trying things out. And now that everything is set up, I am very certain that I’ll never switch to another distro again, Nix is just too good.
Yep, no leak.