I'm not qualified enough to argue, but I wouldn't trust Durov. He's a competitor, after all. And he has a history of questionable decisions.
java
$ cat Projects/qbittorrent/docker-compose.yml
version: "2.1"
services:
qbittorrent:
image: lscr.io/linuxserver/qbittorrent:latest
container_name: qbittorrent
environment:
- PUID=1000
- PGID=1000
- TZ=Europe/Berlin
- WEBUI_PORT=8081
volumes:
- /path/to/appdata/config:/config
- /home/username/Downloads/Torrents:/downloads
ports:
- 8081:8081
- 6881:6881
- 6881:6881/udp
restart: unless-stopped
The whole server is running under the VPN.
to the point of being denied service
Yes. Spotify blocks my account if I'm using VPN, ChatGPT asks to solve ridiculous captchas (on a paid account!). It's crazy. Reddit blocks access if you're on the VPN and not logged in.
You forgot to describe what's your problem.
Google, Meta and Microsoft are bad. But I'm good. I want to dictate who can use open-source software and how!
If it was just for game OSTs and other less common music. Over time I noticed that my playlists on streaming services start losing songs, mainstream music. Sometimes this is because an artist leaves one label for another, but sometimes I have no explanation. And I don't even notice that until "hey, I haven't heard that song in years... wait, where is it? where are these albums??" It's frustrating. This pushed me to pirate music again.
I'm glad that wizards keep pushing boundaries of magic.
Imagine you have lots of toys, like your favorite games and cool apps on your tablet or phone. If you had to update them manually, it's like having to go to each toy, take it apart, fix anything that's broken, and then put it back together every time there's a new version or improvement.
Now, think about having a special toy store for your toys. When you go to the store, they already know about any new cool features or fixes for your toys. All you have to do is ask the store to update your toys, and they make sure all your toys get the latest and greatest stuff without you having to do anything.
So, having a store for apps is like having a magical place where all your toys can be fixed and improved automatically, without you having to do the hard work of updating each one by yourself. It saves you time and makes sure your toys are always the best they can be!
How? It's not on F-Droid. Play store is obviously not an option for a person, who cares about privacy.
Why are there supported tags? Why can't #AnyTag be parsed by the bot? I don't expect many people to make the effort to check which tags are allowed.
Why should a Lemmy user care about this? It appears there is no integration with Lemmy beyond parsing. For instance, you can't quickly filter by tags from the sidebar.
I suppose it's still useful since the #piracy tag is added automatically. However, the overall idea feels rather raw.
rutracker.org, e.g. https://rutracker.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=3494796
The interface is in Russian, but it's not that hard to translate a couple of words to navigate. Apparently, you don't even have to be registered to download anymore.
Wasn't reddit always like that? Or was this particular sub okay?