chocolate_mintute_man

joined 1 year ago
 

As per title, I've been thinking, Tech has been seeing a downturn due to investor money divesting, perhaps that's part of the source of pressure for crackdowns on piracy, in addition to youtube restricting ad blockers, and other enshittification around other streaming media (whether it is behind reddit's enshittification is perhaps a different convo)

Pretty sure I saw a thing from the instance admin that a sufficiently anonymous host costs about 3x as much as whatever he was using, and would need more donations prior.

For hire private 50 cent party. Typical PR move, beyond just Reddit. A statement like

You’re shilling for a different company lmfao…pot calling the kettle black…

is probably written by someone who doesn't know or care about the details of what's been happening. Which means they're probably either using a script, or making assumptions to just do their job. The fact that decentralised communication is a far cry from corporations is completely missed because they probably just don't know.

[–] chocolate_mintute_man@lemmynsfw.com 3 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Ham radio enthusiasts will start feeling very pleased with themselves then. Until jammers are brought in anyway.

The tricky bit is that a smaller ownership structure makes the owners more personally liable, as arguments could more easily be made that the entire server exists to service the most active channel regardless of the other content. Larger platforms are better able to utilise Safe Harbour rules. As someone else has said, it also matters where the servers are located.

lol, have you got all your batteries and inverters setup lol. In all seriousness, I used to hoard, but it's too much hassle, I've got too big a backlog of stuff to organise, and yeah I'll just redownload stuff I know is popular enough to remain available. I do like watching my ratios though, making sure I'm doing my bit to keep the water flowing. Data in transit as storage. Treating torrents as a form of ephemeral storage, where it can come back to me if I wish for it again. Perhaps I'm describing something more like IPFS though.

I am aware of that, however, I want to be as discoverable as possible so that other people without port forwarding can connect to me, increasing my capacity to share and care.

[–] chocolate_mintute_man@lemmynsfw.com 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Yes of course. Configuration of port forwards and split tunnelling etc are outside the scope of wireguard though.

[–] chocolate_mintute_man@lemmynsfw.com 2 points 1 year ago (3 children)

Ah thanks for the review, Linux is 100% relevant to me.

[–] chocolate_mintute_man@lemmynsfw.com 0 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

No it doesn't stop it, just seed torrenting as you say. Makes it harder for others to download from you if they too do not have open ports. Got to facilitate sharing is caring.

A VPN acts like a NAT layer, so you basically have to open a port forward in order for traffic to dial your number, so to speak.

It may be in your case that you have UPnP or similar set up, so that your router automatically picks up your open port. Not viable for VPNs which tend to service enough clients to qualify as CGNAT, so we set up fixed ports.

Edit: Looks like I was wrong about not viable, seems like ProtonVPN has a NAT-PMP switch in their config

 

I'm considering ProtonVPN to replace mullvad as they do have port forwarding for torrenting. I also did a quick search for VPN communities, but didn't find any. Maybe just not from my instance.

Just wondering if they'll end up axing port forwarding, if I pay for a extended length plan and then they axe the feature, I will have wasted quite a bit of money. At least with mullvad, it was monthly anyway, so not much to lose.