That is the fluffiest Del Monte loaf I have ever seen.
Trans
Just a individual living life and enjoying it, love life whilst it lasts
That is the fluffiest Del Monte loaf I have ever seen.


Phishing actually is a core branch of hacking—specifically under Social Engineering. It’s not really like walking through an unlocked door; it’s more like a con artist dressing up as a locksmith and convincing the homeowner to hand over the keys.
Hacking applies to the entire attack surface, which includes the human element, further more there are whole phishing campaigns that are heavily automated and often deliver stealer malware, making them a full cyber attack.
This wasn’t a technical compromise of Signal itself, but phishing/social engineering is still a form of hacking.


I’m pretty sure -r flag actually stands for –resizefs. When you include it, lvextend automatically runs the appropriate resize command (resize2fs) for you in the background immediately after the volume is expanded.
Which makes it a convenient, single-step process.


He’s like:
“HOW DARE YOU INTERRUPT MY SLUMBER!”


Do a backup image of the partition first before you run these commands.
If you decide to use all free space: sudo lvextend -r -l +100%FREE /dev/ubuntu-vg/ubuntu-lv
Should suffice I’m pretty sure.


Please fix the wording of this post, I got confused, I thought you were talking about the age demographic you are targeting. I think you mean the amount of games you have.


I think the setup script that applies the config changes is documented here: https://codeberg.org/celenity/Phoenix/src/branch/dev/docs/install.md


Yeah, autocorrect got me on my phone — fixed now 👍


Do not go gentle into that good night.


If you point Traefik’s forwardAuth at the internal service (e.g. http://<tinyauth-ip>:3000/api/auth/traefik), TinyAuth doesn’t see the correct X-Forwarded-* headers or original host, so it won’t return the auth headers properly.
if you switch to using the public URL instead, the headers should start working — but only once using the full endpoint:
https://tinyauth.domain.tld/api/auth/traefik
Not just the root URL.
That way:
Also worth double-checking that your header names match exactly (e.g. Remote-Groups vs Remote-Group).
So in short: don’t call TinyAuth directly by IP, go through the domain + correct path.
I run a modest Lemmy instance (lemmy.blehiscool.com). It’s not on the scale of lemmy.world or anything, but it’s been around long enough that I’ve had to deal with some real growth and scaling issues. I’ll try to focus on what actually matters in practice rather than theory.
I’m running everything via Docker Compose on a single VPS (22GB RAM, 8 vCPU). That includes Postgres, Pictrs, and the Lemmy services.
This setup is great right up until it suddenly isn’t.
The main scaling issue I hit was federation backlog. At one point, the queue started piling up badly, and the fix was increasing federation worker threads (I’m currently at 128).
If you run into this, check your lemmy_federate logs—if you see:
“Waiting for X workers”
that’s your early warning sign.
Once your infrastructure is stable, the technical side becomes pretty low-effort.
The real time sink is moderation and community management. Easily 90% of the work.
On the technical side, my setup is pretty straightforward:
pg_dump + VPS-level backupsBackups are boring right up until they aren’t. Test your restores. Seriously.
The main gaps I’ve run into:
Pictrs storage growth Images from federated content add up fast. Keep an eye on disk usage.
Postgres tuning As tables grow, default configs start to fall behind.
Federation queue visibility There’s no great built-in “at a glance” view—you end up relying on logs.
Nothing fancy, just consistent habits:
Daily (quick check):
Weekly:
Monthly:
As needed:
If I were starting over:
Happy to answer specifics if you’re planning a setup—there’s a lot of small gotchas that only show up once you’ve been running things for a while.
A more neutral way to put it is that libertarianism and anarchism both value individual freedom, but differ on the role of the state.
Libertarians generally want a minimal state (for things like courts, police, national defense), while anarchists want to eliminate the state entirely.
There are also different kinds of anarchists—some are anti-capitalist, while others (like anarcho-capitalists) overlap more with libertarian ideas.


Not to mention the owner of simplex is a horrible person.


Something I’ve been thinking about: independent security projects often face pressure once corporate partnerships or funding enter the picture.
Does GrapheneOS have any structural safeguards to ensure development priorities remain community-driven if hardware vendors become more involved?
I’m not assuming there’s a problem — just interested in how projects like this avoid the “venture capital influence” problem that has affected other open source initiatives.



Me too.


America to every other country: https://youtu.be/esslNGOMNAU?t=43
CounterSocial blocks entire IP ranges and most VPN/datacenter networks as part of its anti-abuse policy. It’s not really decentralised, so if you’re blocked at the network level there’s usually no workaround unless they manually allow you.
I wish I could sleep like that cat, that dream must be really something, whatever is going on up there!