Bei dem Weg: Es heißt "rechtmäßig", ohne "s"
They missed April fools by about a month
Ach so, wenn das alle machen ist das natürlich okay
Unimogs dürften leider auch unter diese Regelung fallen, da sie nicht spezifisch auf SUVs, sondern auf das Fahrzeuggewicht ausgelegt ist...
True, but in this case it might be a good option until the corresponding Fossify app is available.
Xwixxer
Haven't seen that one before, in German it sounds like "Xwanker"
Kommt drauf an. Das Gerichtsurteil, um das es hier geht, listet eine Reihe verschiedener Gründe, warum dieser konkrete Fall nicht illegal war. Einer davon war die Dunkelheit.
I do an automated nightly backup via restic to Backblaze B2. Every month, I manually run a script to copy the latest backup from B2 to two local HDDs that I keep offline. Every half a year I recover the latest backup on my PC to make sure everything works in case I need it. For peace of mind, my automated backup includes a health check through healthchecks.io, so if anything goes wrong, I get a notification.
It's pretty low-maintenance and gives a high degree of resilience:
- A ransomware attack won't affect my local HDDs, so at most I'll lose a month's worth of data.
- A house fire or server failure won't affect B2, so at most I'll lose a day's worth of data.
restic has been very solid, includes encryption out of the box, and I like the simplicity of it. Easily automated with cron etc. Backblaze B2 is one of the cheapest cloud storage providers I could find, an alternative might be Wasabi if you have >1TB of data.
The usual argument is "FP5 bad because no headphone jack, I choose Nokia or Samsung"... I guess if you're not even trying to have a fair and sustainable supply chain, that's totally fine.
I also like "carpenter helper", makes you wonder if regular carpenters are affected differently...
I say let them be, there are (or soon were) many different third-party apps for Reddit as well and each has their own niche of users for whom it works just right. Jerboa has plenty of devs working on it, and if in doubt I'll always prefer having a choice between different apps. Let the free FOSS market decide!
syncthing also relies on a web server for device discovery, it's just that you're probably using someone else's server instead of hosting your own.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I also think that Vaultwarden itself doesn't have access to the unencrypted password database. In that sense it's E2EE similar to KeePass, the only difference being that KeePass is a desktop app and Vaultwarden a web app.