ProtonVPN has it though, which is what I’m using now.
ProtonVPN has it though, which is what I’m using now.
I host a server, I forward the port, my friends can connect to the open port on the VPN side.
My ISP does not offer port forwarding.
No port forwarding really kills the utility though - I mainly use the VPN to do port forwarding (e.g. for video games, Plex, etc.) as my ISP is shit.
Like I’m not worried about state-level de-anonymisation, I just want to be able to share services remotely and have a minimum level of anonymity.
They should really mandate open firmware and bootloaders, and even spec sheets, etc. for deprecated hardware.
People created fake photoshop images long before AI…
What is the Mastodon Lemmy.world equivalent? Like a big, neutral server with minimal censorship and bullshit, and access to most other servers?
He’s winning against the gangs though - every Salvadorean I know supports him.
I like that you can follow scientists and authors directly at the source though.
Yeah, for both OpenVPN and Wireguard.
On Linux you can do this with full control via network namespaces. I use vopono to automate it - https://github.com/jamesmcm/vopono
But if you can afford it I’d recommend paying for Proton’s services as they offer a lot together, or a low-end VPS (where you could do it yourself, although be careful to find ones that don’t ban hosting Wireguard, etc. for example). Both are really useful if you want to test making something local available on the Internet e.g. ports for multiplayer games or a webserver prototype.
So that makes it okay for massively popular LLM models to spread defamatory lies about him?
Another benefit of using network namespaces is that I can just disable IPv6 in the network namespace itself.
On Linux you can use network namespaces for the same effect (and then a firewall) - this way it doesn’t affect other applications running.
I do it with vopono.
ProtonVPN for port forwarding, Mullvad for easy usage (Wireguard on Linux).
I use vopono on Linux too.
How long until people will be carrying Raspberry Pis over the borders for their own hotspots? /s
It’s crazy how quickly mass censorship is becoming commonplace though. From shadowbanning on Reddit and Twitter, to court blocking in the UK, Spain and Italy.
They abandoned a lot of the Free Speech stuff - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Civil_Liberties_Union#Waning_interest_in_defending_white_supremacists’_first_amendment_rights
Obviously I don’t support white supremacists, but they’ve stepped away from being defenders of the constitution in that respect. Same for defending those not using certain pronouns, etc.
With that budget I find it hard to imagine you could beat the Raspberry Pi, but please post what you do find!
They’re awesome, but I feel like it’ll go the way of the ACLU eventually.
Like nowadays on Reddit you see a lot of support for all the bureaucratic regulation like the AI act, Cybersecurity act, etc. empowering Big Tech monopolies and Big Government control over start-ups and tinkerers.
The EU’s AI Act isn’t far from this really. Regulating the development of AI so much, it’d be like if they regulated compilers to stop GNU back in the day.
ProtonVPN has it, and Wireguard support.