put .rss on the end of the subreddit url and add to a reader. I made a multireddit containing all of my subs, and access it like this (the multireddit has to be marked public: https://www.reddit.com/user/username/m/multiredditname/.rss
If it's anything like my workplace, about 25% of them are doing 75% of the work while the rest do powerpoints and stand around bullshitting all day.
“Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows.” ― George Orwell, 1984
ran into some weirdness after updating my private instance via ansible. Was getting lots of json errors and bad gateway errors along with occasional timeouts. Reverted to pre-upgrade snapshot for now.
It's been said here that accessing content from the large servers via a federation connection is less taxing on the servers than accessing them directly, so there's that.
Giggity.
Yeah I don't see any harm in being a clearly labeled fan community. May also want to take the same hard line here that they do about illegal activity/messing with stuff you don't own.
^this!
Mine runs on a synology nas, and i have a hyperbackup task that copies the data volume up to gdrive every night (encrypted of course).
Also, any device you've synced to vaultwarden will retain the data even if the server is down, and with the addin for firefox for example, you can export that data out.
Coincidentally I was looking for something exactly like this earlier with no luck. Appreciate it.
No matter who you are or how privacy focused your service, you are still required to comply with legal court orders from various countries:
https://www.wired.com/story/protonmail-amends-policy-after-giving-up-activists-data/