my own domain and a good email service
Sorry for being dense, but how does this work exactly? Do you register your own domain as something like mangopenguin.com and then how do you get email to go through that?
my own domain and a good email service
Sorry for being dense, but how does this work exactly? Do you register your own domain as something like mangopenguin.com and then how do you get email to go through that?
self host whatever I can
Do you have hardware in your home or do you have some virtual private server or whatever they’re called?
Are you being coerced into saying that, though?
Good to know. Is there a particular guide that you followed to get it running on AMD?
There are organizations that purport to be Yelp alternatives, such as Open Reviews Association, but I haven’t seen anything with widespread integration or adoption. It’s a cool idea nonetheless.
We walked uphill both ways.
Does PipePipe allow the user to log into their Google account, though?
Other responses have covered the “not without being logged into Google” part, so I’ll just add that if you don’t care about being logged into Google and the thing you want from a front end is Sponsor Block, then yes: YouTube in a browser with the Sponsor Block extension. On Android, the YouTube app w/ Revanced accomplishes the same thing.
I’ve gotten pretty good results from Perplexity. The responses contain links to sources, Wikipedia style, which enables me to verify the answers in the AI generated response.
crowd sourced traffic info
I did not know that about Magic Earth. I’ll have to test that out on my next trip into the city.
Sauce? I tried searching and couldn’t find anything (at least not on the first page of results). Thanks.
On chromecast I’ve been happy with SmartTube, which includes sponsor block and still allows me to log into YT so I get to keep my history.
In Firefox I’ve just discovered an extension called Lib Redirect, which works for YT, Reddit, Twitter, and other sites. Highly recommend.
Leaked how? No good practice allows any way for a password to “leak”.
Suppose a social media website has a data breach.
What rotating passwords does is ensure people who don’t use a password manager either write their password down more and more frequently, or use a weaker password with some simple changing pattern that doesn’t add anything.
Okay, but suppose I use a password manager like Keepass, then does rotating my passwords not make me any safer in the event a social media website’s data is breached and ends up being sold off on the dark web?
What’s the logic behind this statement? I would’ve thought that if a website’s logins and passwords were somehow leaked, the more often I change my password, the less likely it is for the leaked password to still be usable by bad guys based on the shorter time horizon.
And your outgoing emails aren’t getting caught in Google’s spam filters & what not?