Feedly - been around for many years and it’s still maintained. Very clean interface and has a decent feed discovery function.
I’m a pretty important person, you should read my profile.
Feedly - been around for many years and it’s still maintained. Very clean interface and has a decent feed discovery function.
I don’t trust vaultwarden, only on the basis that it’s unofficial and not as strictly audited. I use the container stack provided by bitwarden behind a cloudflare tunnel and backup the data directory with duplicati to S3. Should be able to do the same with vaultwarden, just try a backup test.
It’s typically against the terms of service to open ports less than 1024 (well known ports) of most ISP’s for personal internet. That, and there are bots that probe for insecure and misconfigured stuff constantly. Spin up a VPS and take a look at the SSH logs. What if a zero day vulnerability occurs? Are you going to be able to react quick enough to prevent someone from doing damage?
Cloudflare is nice because you no longer need to update your DNS A records, plus it caches data, automatically enables SSL, and absorbs bot traffic for you. Have also tried the Wireguard + VPS route, but that gets expensive because most charge ingress and egress.
I was looking into this for Plex the other day. There’s some conflicting information on the internet right now. From what I can tell, large non-HTML content still seems to be against their ToS, unless you’re an Enterprise customer or serving the files/media with CloudFlare’s R2 or Stream services. I hope I’m wrong though, if someone can confirm.
This post from CloudFlare explains the recent changes to their ToS, and the CDN ToS appears to disallow media or large file content.
I host bitwarden with cloudflare tunnels and have an A record on my local DNS for it, so on LAN I can access it directly but still host it publicly without exposing ports.
The discussion on the LWN post gives some insight into why this is probably happening. Most likely due to Rocky/Alma not contributing upstream while benefiting from Red Hat’s work.