immibis

joined 2 years ago
[–] immibis@social.immibis.com 0 points 2 years ago (1 children)

@skullgiver Yes, there are many ways to make sure your server connects to Tor and I2P sites. But that's what the guy who ISN'T running a Tor/I2P site has to do, to federate with the Tor/I2P site. If you're running the Tor/I2P site you can't really do much on your side to enable federation.

Cloudflare won't help because you need inbound connections. Some VPNs support *transient* port mapping designed for BitTorrent, but good luck trying to claim a stable port number for any significant length of time, never mind port 443 (which I'm sure is outside of the allocation range anyway). You'd have more luck trying to find a VPS provider crazy enough to let you pay anonymously with cryptocurrency with just a pinky promise that you're not hosting child porn. Or just don't federate.

[–] immibis@social.immibis.com 4 points 2 years ago (3 children)

@TrinityTek vhosts also refers to the general concept. In nginx you configure multiple servers with the same listening addresses but different names.

[–] immibis@social.immibis.com 1 points 2 years ago

@prole @ReCursing In most cases, the Tor instance wants to federate with clearnet instances. Clearnet instances might want to opt-in to federating with Tor instances - no child porn, but reading news about piracy is legal.

[–] immibis@social.immibis.com 3 points 2 years ago (3 children)

@skullgiver @Fonz It is possible; you have to set it up yourself and you won't federate with many places.

Hosting Lemmy or Mastodon on Tor or I2P isn't hard; you just host it, and link your Tor/I2P daemon to it same as any other website. But you have to be aware you'll be cut off from the majority of other instances. You'll be running standalone.

I am not sure about Lemmy, but Pleroma supports feeding all your federation traffic through a proxy; you can use one called fedproxy to split out your I2P federation traffic through your I2P daemon, and likewise for Tor. I am not currently running this on my server. It should still work for other fedisoftware than Pleroma. https://docs.akkoma.dev/stable/configuration/i2p/

[–] immibis@social.immibis.com 1 points 2 years ago (1 children)

@Feweroptions This is the story that capitalists tell you to justify why it's okay for them to steal your money.

Land costs nothing, and equipment is just someone else's labour.

Do note that if a manager or even a CEO does management work, that's still work and should be rewarded as such.

Also note that CEOs and shareholders are massively overpaid in today's society. If one person were to not pay them, they'd still be massively overpaid.

[–] immibis@social.immibis.com 6 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (8 children)

@TrinityTek@lemmy.world @selfhosted@lemmy.world Everything on your server has a URL, like https://your.server.name.example/c/your_community_name. Unless you want all the official public URLs to everything on your server to have a port number in them (https://your.server.name.example:1234/TrinityTek) you probably want to figure this out before deploying anything.

I suggest using vhosts. You can for example run Lemmy on port 8001 and Mastodon on port 8002 (both should be bound to 127.0.0.1 without HTTPS). Then you get two domain names pointing at the same server. Then you install nginx on your server, as your actual web server, and you configure it so requests for lemmy.trinitytek.com gets proxied to lemmy and mastodon.trinitytek.com gets proxied to mastodon

[–] immibis@social.immibis.com 3 points 2 years ago (3 children)

@flambonkscious @RedCanasta And the people who made that work earn approximately 0.1% of what you pay for the work. The other 99.9% goes to shareholders. Wouldn't it make more sense to give the workers 100%, or even 10% of the normal price?

[–] immibis@social.immibis.com 9 points 2 years ago (2 children)

@online @selfhosted I have to say this is the first time I've ever seen anyone ask this

[–] immibis@social.immibis.com 2 points 2 years ago

@kratoz29 @selfhosted You cannot go much cheaper from $6 per month... there's just not that far down to go. You can save maybe another $3 per month. There's a $3.50/mo plan on Vultr. I have an OVHcloud VPS that cost $100 for 2 years but that was some special promotional deal.

I also stumbled across this one that is $3.40/month (but the $5/month is a much better deal, with 4GB of RAM) but I don't know anything about this hosting provider so it could just as well be a scam: https://bill.alexhost.com/cart/moldova/

[–] immibis@social.immibis.com 5 points 2 years ago

@Amanduh @TrinityTek you can't just make up any word you like for the last part

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