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Joined 1Y ago
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Cake day: Jun 15, 2023

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Oh, we’re enjoying it alright! Ever since Apple announced that they would kill off a service that we were using (basically to sync files between different computers and TVs) and replace it with iCloud (for which we would have to pay a lot). It was a pain trying to set it up but eventually I got it working. Very impressed at how well it does its thing.



How do I make sure my Nextcloud instance is accessible only to people in my local wifi?
Hey y'all! First time trying to self-host something, I started with a local Nextcloud instance for me and my family to use. I just wanted to make sure that no outsiders can enter the instance (access it or its files) through a browser on another connection. I don't have a DNS server so we access it through its IP address. The connection is unencrypted (I don't know if this is a problem on a local instance, but from what I've read, I need a local DNS server to encrypt it, as well as to be able to set a domain (?) name (I don't really know if it's a domain name, but I'm referring to the website name, for instance google.com). I don't think leaving it as it is (unencrypted, no domain name, only accessible through IP) will be problematic. Could other people access the server remotely with this setting? By remotely, I mean from far away. I tried out Nextcloud's own Security Scan and it returns: >Scan failed! The scan for the specified domain failed. Either no Nextcloud or ownCloud can be found there or you tried to scan too many servers. I'm guessing this is a good thing for what I'm trying to achieve? for reference, the tutorial I've used is [this one](https://youtu.be/5IUKE3oA7AY) under Linux Mint
fedilink

Never gonna happen. That’s the good stuff about federation and open-source


They recently got visited by officers of the country they’re in. The officers didn’t find shit (no logs, no ips, nothing)