I can’t tell you how many channels have disappeared and been memory-holed. Especially since censorship went into overdrive around 2019.
Data hoarders can show you how the world was before all that happened.
I can’t tell you how many channels have disappeared and been memory-holed. Especially since censorship went into overdrive around 2019.
Data hoarders can show you how the world was before all that happened.
Yes and no.
Yes if you have the resources to monitor and update. Companies have entire teams dedicated to this.
No if you don’t have the resources/time to keep up with it regularly.
IMO, no need to take this risk when you have services like Tailscale available today.
Really depends on your use case.
Unraid is wonderful and easy to use. But really has two reasons to use it:Unraid Array fits your file storage strategy. (few writes, mainly reads)You want an EZ way to get into docker and use the unraid appstore.
Other than that, you can probably find everything on Debian or Ubuntu. (I prefer Debian for services)
You can add one more:
Proxmox and then run a Debian VM for docker, for example, and compartmentalize other things you may want to run.
Also, download a mem test utility and run it overnight to test your hardware.
I started out self hosting everything… 20 years ago or so. Then I got swept up in the “cloud” movement and put so many things into the “cloud”.
Today I’m reverting back to how I started, self hosting everything that I can.
Mainly privacy, but also because they keep changing and I don’t want to have to worry about them.
I just didn’t feel like it was ‘my’ data anymore.
Can be safer. Can be worse.
A poorly configured self hosted vaultwarden can be a major security issue.
A properly configured one is arguable safer than hosting with a 3rd party. Lastpass taught me that one.
If you configure it to where it’s not exposed to the web, and only accessed through a VPN, like Tailscale. It can be quite robust.
self hosted git repository.
I setup gitea on my server and use it to track version changes of all my scripts.
And I use a combination of the wiki and .md (readme) files for howto’s and any inventory I’m keeping, like IP addresses, CPU assignments etc.
But mainly it’s all in .md formatted with markdown.
I do this at the file system level, not the file level, using zfs.
Unless the container has a database, I use zfs snapshots. If it has a database, my script dumps the database first and then does a ZFS snapshot. Then that snapshot is sent via sanoid to a zfs disk that is in a different backup pool.
This is a block level backup, so it only backs up the actual data blocks that changed.
Censorship and Memory-holing