Sorry, I understood you wrong. You’re right!
Sorry, I understood you wrong. You’re right!
Nothing of value was lost when EV certificates disappeared.
even more secure with the 90 days policy.
Yes, if you do this manually it will work.
I meant certbot with nginx plugin and http-01 challenge.
You’re right, ssl.com offers this, too.
IMO, sticking to manual processes that are error-prone is a waste of money and not a sign of a honest business.
Yes, it can be easier. But not every DNS provider allows API access, so you might need to change the provider.
(good luck with that in many enterprise scenarios).
I’ve set it up fully automated with traefik and dns challenges.
Letsencrypt issues wildcard certificates. This is however more complicated to setup.
AFAIK, the only reason not to use Letsencrypt are when you are not able to automate the process to change the certificate.
As the paid certificates are valid for 12 month, you have to change them less often than a letsencrypt certificate.
At work, we pay something like 30-50€ for a certificate for a year. As changing certificates costs, it is more economical to buy a certificate.
But generally, it is best to use letsencrypt when you can automate the process (e.g. with nginx).
As for the question of trust: The process of issuing certificates is done in a way that the certificate authority never has access to your private key. You don’t trust the CA with anything (except your payment data maybe).
At least for me, this works out of the box.
Some requirements:
A simple cron job with youtube-dl works also fine.
Edit: But thanks for your suggestion! I’ll take a look
Edit 2: TubeArchivist looks nice, but way over my personal needs. Also, its performance requirements are quite high for my small server (4 Cores, 4 GB RAM). I’ll keep my small, scripted solution (yt-dl + store to nextcloud folders).
Is it possible to submit a channel and download all the videos (also new videos when they are released).
Based on the complexitiy of this setup, you need to be quite enthusiastic about your homelab.
Never use SMR drives for a RAID setup. But outside of RAID, they’re probably fine.
The linked essay is quite long and (at least for me) hard to read. One of the first links in the article is to this patreon blog post, that summarizes the issue well.
As we first announced last year, Apple is requiring that Patreon use their in-app purchasing system and remove all other billing systems from the Patreon iOS app by November 2024.
This has two major consequences for creators:
- Apple will be applying their 30% App Store fee to all new memberships purchased in the Patreon iOS app, in addition to anything bought in your Patreon shop.
- Any creator currently on first-of-the-month or per-creation billing plans will have to switch over to subscription billing to continue earning in the iOS app, because that’s the only billing type Apple’s in-app purchase system supports.
Before we go any further, we want to be crystal clear about one thing: Apple’s fee will not impact your existing members. It will only affect new memberships purchased in the iOS app from November onward.
The 100mb/sec are becoming a bottleneck for some use cases, but the capacity is awesome.
Ryzen 2000 and 3000 are still fairly recent and were announced 5-6 years ago.
You’re right, Google released their vision in 2023, here is what it says regarding lifespan: