Usenet is a lot faster than torrents, you don't need a VPN, and it's more reliable than anything but great private trackers.
Lidarr is the corresponding program for music, setup is almost identical to what you're already running. And if you use Prowlarr to manage your indexers, it also works with Lidarr.
If you go to your torrent client and disable the missing file, it should get reported as "complete" to the *arrs. Manual and annoying, but it works.
Unless you're also running a torrent client, you don't really need a VPN at all. The *arrs aren't doing anything that needs to be hidden, and Usenet is fine with just SSL.
You can interact with a single container if you need to, not just the whole compose group. docker compose restart jellyfin
works for your example, and "restart" can be swapped for stop or start as needed.
Splitting compose files can be a good idea, but it isn't always necessary.
It's textbook destabilization. We just aren't used to seeing them use the tactics at home.
It goes farther than ad-tolerant, a lot of them enjoy the ads. They see them as a natural part of the content.
Some of the apps can do that (Connect for one), but it isn't a core Lemmy feature yet.
The VPN is for a torrent client. No need to worry about streaming services when you're sailing the high seas instead.
You should be fine on basically anything. I have a similar-spec machine running Arch with KDE and it's rock solid.
"Judicial bias" is going to be thrown around a lot during appeals, and these same quotes from Engoron will be used as evidence. This is all a play, and it could work in the long-term.
The Copilot integration they recently pushed to 11 says otherwise. They're going hard on AI moving forward.