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Cake day: May 2nd, 2026

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  • Like all VPN-like things, some amount of data has to flow through their system. But almost everything is encrypted nowadays so it’s generally not too big of a worry.

    For Tailscale though, they see way less. They see your IP during device setup, and maybe during use if things are making it hard for them to enable a direct connection. Depending on your DNS setup, they may see some of your DNS requests.

    Its also really easy to setup your own headscale sever and then nothing goes to them at all. I recommend a small VPS for that, rather than running it on your home internet connection.




  • As I posted elsewhere:

    When I spoke with Wicks’ staffers in charge of this, they said that the reason behind it is that California has age restrictions for various kinds of sites and applications (no porn apps under 18, restrictions on social media and chat for kids, etc). The various big tech companies said they didn’t want to be responsible for figuring out how to track and verify all that, so they asked for something that would mean they didn’t have to.

    The bill was originally written with that as the background, and they specifically added language about just trusting what was entered and not collecting identification past that.

    I got the impression that the staffers were intelligent, thoughtful people, just with no experience or knowledge of non big tech stuff. They have been living in the Apple/Microsoft/Google world like most normies. They were very surprised and intrigued when I told them that Debian collects no information on users. One said they were interested in giving Linux a try because of how bad Windows 11 is.




  • BartyDeCanter@piefed.socialtoLinux@lemmy.mlDo you use vim?
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    10 days ago

    In college, my advisor/boss was basically the emacs guy, so I picked up enough to do some basic text editing but didn’t go further because I didn’t feel like spending hours reading man pages.

    Later I worked at a place where a shared computer only had vi, so same story. I learned about a half dozen commands and left it with that.

    Then I went though a series of other editors and IDEs at different jobs, Notepad++, StyledEdit, CodeWarrior, CodeComposer, some weird proprietary Netbeans based thing, VS Code, etc. I still used vi for minor config editing on the occasional remote machine.

    Then I got a job where I would be doing a ton of work on headless remotes, so I decided to get serious about learning something purely terminal based. I tried a couple of things, but ended up with Helix because:

    1. it runs pretty great on my 15 year old laptop
    2. the vi commands I remembered worked
    3. it has actual command discoverability out of the box
    4. I didn’t have to install 153 plugins and write a 2834 line config file to make it useful

    Now I’m all helix all the time and really enjoying it.