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Joined 11 months ago
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Cake day: July 22nd, 2023

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  • Good question, good to see how others do it.

    Mine: A well specced debian server in the garage running a crapload of stuff, including arrs and Jellyfin with Jellyseer, all in docker containers. Playback via debian laptop or Windows desktop using the official apps, and the tv paired with an Amazon Fire dongle running the Jellyfin app. All works really well.

    The only problem is my wife sometimes deletes an entire series instead of the series somehow. I honestly don’t know how but I’ve had to download Young Sheldon for her four times now…







  • “We’re shocked” - nobody.

    But companies are crawling everything like mad - I’ve noticed a 400% upturn this year alone in bot traffic on a low traffic web forum and a few sites I host, so much so that I’m having to do some fairly heavy filtering upstream to keep them out. (They don’t resepect robots.txt, obviously)

    When bot traffic outnumbers legitimate traffic at least 10x, it makes you wonder why you’re paying to host stuff.






  • Ignoring first warning as a red herring.

    The error though - that sounds like Jellyfin is contacting the right IP for Truenas, but Truenas is providing a cert for SSL using its old IP, and Jellyfin is refusing to talk to it since they don’t match. ~

    Fix might be to get Truenas to regenerate its SSL certs, which I assume are self generated.

    Or force Truenas back on the old IP - you really want something like that to be on a static IP, or if it must be DHCP, to have a fixed reservation. Or have automatic DNS so that you don’t use IPs at all, but that’s usually a lot more faff. If it’s not set to a single IP, you’ll hit this problem repeatedly.




  • Don’t think it’s generational. I’ve had a gmail account for about 15 years, and use youtube a lot, and I’m in my 50s. I watch a lot of repair, will it start, restoration and motorbike videos - there’s some amazing content on there, far better than anything available on my tv. And as an educational tool - need to repair something in your home, or change the brakes on your car? Within seconds you have multiple instructional videos of real people actually showing you how to do that exact thing - the world’s never known such a thing.




  • I feel really bad for everyone involved - customers and staff. The human cost in this is huge.

    Yes, there’s a lot of criticism of backup strategies here, but I bet most of us who deal with this professionally have knowledge of systems that would also be vulnerable to malicious attack, and that’s only the shortcomings we know about. Audits and pentesting are great, but not infallable and one tiny mistake can expose everything. If we were all as good as we think we are, ransomware wouldn’t be a thing.