![](/static/253f0d9b/assets/icons/icon-96x96.png)
![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/8286e071-7449-4413-a084-1eb5242e2cf4.png)
Not quite the same as Proton, you have to use your own domain and set all that up, and I already mentioned the plus thing isn’t an option for obvious reasons. Still good, but not quite as good.
Not quite the same as Proton, you have to use your own domain and set all that up, and I already mentioned the plus thing isn’t an option for obvious reasons. Still good, but not quite as good.
Plus you can’t arbitrarily delete them to nuke an entire website account if you wanted to.
Managing my blu ray library. Among other things. What are you using Linux for that isn’t piracy?
By your metrics, possiblylinix127, Linux is also a system that is used for piracy. I can do piracy on Linux. That makes it illegal!
Does bitwarden allow me to automatically create a new randomized email address for every new saved login I create, that forwards to my secret main address? That’s the main thing that’s keeping me with Proton. Every online account is a different email. When I start getting spam because one leaked, I simply delete that email address, problem solved. Something like the Gmail plus thing doesn’t work since I can’t arbitrarily delete an alias that way when I want to.
Why down vote? This bot lets mastodon users join in the discussion IIRC.
I have my plex accessible from outside, but only to plex users I add. It’s not like anyone can just get my IP and watch my content.
I have my data backed up locally on an HDD, though I’m planning on building a server machine to hold more data with parity (not just for backups). Important data I have backed up in Google drive and Proton drive, both encrypted before upload. It isn’t that big, I don’t back up media or anything in the cloud. Oh and I have some stuff in mega, but I stopped adding to that years ago. I should probably delete that account, thanks for the reminder!
Host your own. Plex wasn’t designed to be a mass distribution. It is designed for home theater/personal use in or out of network.
Don’t get addicted to 60? That’s the standard. We’ve moved on to “don’t get addicted to 144” because that is both easily achievable with moderately affordable hardware and widely supported now.