• @[email protected]OP
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    18113 days ago

    Relevant to !selfhosted because one of the projects getting funding cut is Let’s Encrypt.

      • @[email protected]
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        1712 days ago

        Same. I’ve been thinking about who to donate to this year, and it looks like they’re making the cut. I’ll probably also throw some money at my Lemmy instance and a handful of projects I use, including Tor, because apparently they got caught in the dragnet too.

        • @[email protected]
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          212 days ago

          Which other projects caught your attention? I was going to donate to Graphene, EFF and some TOR operators

          • @[email protected]
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            612 days ago

            Far more than I can reasonably support:

            • self hosted things I use - caddy, the document foundation, Jellyfin, Forgejo, etc
            • Android apps - F-Droid, NewPipe, Signal, RethinkDNS, etc
            • desktop apps - flatpak, For, Godot, etc
            • infrastructure stuff - let’s encrypt, openssh, Linux distros (mine doesn’t accept donations unfortunately), etc

            But the short list for now is:

            • Let’s Encrypt
            • Signal
            • F-Droid

            And I’ll probably run a Tor relay or something as well.

            • @[email protected]
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              212 days ago

              Man, ReThink is such a lifesaver. It’s so good people at Graphene recommend it. I might give Qubes some bucks too, they are awesome

            • @[email protected]
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              212 days ago

              If only there was a decentralised tracker which would track project funding and give us metrics like which project is dangerously close to shutting down

    • @[email protected]
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      14013 days ago

      Let’s Encrypt has done so much for encouraging the spread of HTTPS and good certificate practices. If they went away, I honestly think a good chunk of the internet would start breaking after ~6 months.

          • @[email protected]
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            4812 days ago

            When I spin up a new self hosted service it’s easier to add caddy to the stack than to convince Firefox to load http.

          • @[email protected]
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            1512 days ago

            HTTP works fine in Firefox unless you set it to HTTPS only. Even then, you only have to click off a warning to open an HTTP site.

            • @[email protected]
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              12 days ago

              But if you try to load a local resource as localhost in Firefox…

              For the sake of completeness:

              Firefox contains a security patch which restricts the kinds of files that pages can load (and methods of loading) when you open them from a file:// URL. This change was made to prevent exfiltration of valuable data within reach of a local page, as demonstrated in an available exploit.

              More info: https://developer.mozilla.org/docs/Web/HTTP/CORS/Errors/CORSRequestNotHttp

              Insecure, but fast fix, if you don’t want to install a local webserver:

              about:config
              security.fileuri.strict_origin_policy
              change to false

      • @[email protected]
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        12 days ago

        At least there’s some competitors now, which could be used as drop-in replacements if Let’s Encrypt were to disappear.

        I suspect the vast majority of certificate authorities will implement the ACME protocol eventually, since the industry as a whole is moving towards certificates with shorter expiry times, meaning that automation will essentially be mandatory unless you like manually updating certs every 90-180 days.

    • @[email protected]
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      8213 days ago

      It’s okay, Let’s Encrypt only provides SSL certs for… 63.7% of the market?

      Okay okay, that is a lot. But what does a CA need funding for anyway? It doesn’t take much bandwidth to send out new certs.

      The only thing that could be expensive is if they had to rapidly invalidate thousands of certs to protect the security of the entire internet.

      But haha, that’s a pretty outlandish scenario that would never happen.