Sorry, I'll revise to what I intended (since I also use it). "Does anyone pay attention to it? Do they fuck."
adam
In theory this is done. There is a Do Not Track (DNT) header that is browser defined. Does anyone use it? Do they fuck.
So to be clear, you want traffic coming out of your VPS to have a source address that is your home IP?
No that's not how I read it at all. He wants his VPS to act as a NAT router for email that routes traffic through a wireguard tunnel to the mail server on his home network. His mail server would act as if it was port forwarded using his home router, only it won't be his home IP, it'll be the VPS's
Wish this kind of joined up thinking happened in places other than the Nordics.
Data centres and industry exist and dump heat all over the world. Putting it to use is a no brainer.
Flash drive hidden under the carpet and connected via a USB extension, holding the decryption keys - threat model is a robber making off with the hard drives and gear, where the data just needs to be useless or inaccessible to others.
This is a pretty clever solution. Most thieves won't follow a cable that for all intents looks like a network cable, especially if it disappears into a wall plate or something.
I got lucky. Back when that privacy scare with Whatsapp made mainstream news my Aunt asked in the extended family chat what alternatives there were. I responded that I use SIgnal with my friends (all 2 of them on Signal at the time) and just like that everybody switched. 2 hours later my entire paternal family are on Signal, and still are.
If you've got a good network path NFS mounts work great. Don't forget to also back up your compose files. Then bringing a machine back up is just a case of running them.
What Usenet provider/s did you end up using?
US tech wages are just nuts. In the UK I'm basically maxed out for a non-London based software dev at about £70k (~$87k). Meanwhile I have a friend who has managed to land a job with a London based US tech firm on about £120k (~$150k) which is massive for here but reading this is still a long way off what is possible.
It seems the majority of the torrents with poor seeder count are in the 1.5TB+ range. I just simply don't have the storage for that. Most everything in the 0-300GB range is pretty well covered.
Reads nice but your docs are 404'ing so I can't investigate much :D
EDIT. Found it. You've got a '.com' instead of a '.io'.
Is Yorkshire tea similarly fiddled with? Beats the pants off PG Tips as a general rule.