Recent comments in /f/AskRamble
Heart wrote
If you're White you should confront other White (passive Nazis) people so they will admit that White privilege exists.
We are living in society where people in color re totally afraid of being murdered or raped by white supremacists .
And this isn't acceptable!
div1337 wrote
Reply to Which browsers can you trust enough to use? by Wahaha
Brave (based on Chromium)
hideyourlies wrote
Reply to What to do with a spare VPS? by ____
What are the locations on them?
J0yI9YUX41Wx wrote
Reply to What to do with a spare VPS? by ____
Host a Minecraft server.
Offer competitively priced web hosting to some acquaintances in the web design industry.
Host a new chan. See if you can register ___chan.com.
Wahaha OP wrote
Reply to comment by !deleted261 in Which browsers can you trust enough to use? by Wahaha
Isn't that closed source just like Opera was? I got burned using Opera once and then some cool feature was gone forever with no way to bring it back.
MilkyPastel wrote
Reply to Which browsers can you trust enough to use? by Wahaha
Tor (unless someone has some new info for me)
____ OP wrote
Reply to comment by Rambler in What to do with a spare VPS? by ____
Thanks for this. I only have experience with the Javaless version i2pd so I'll check this out.
Rambler wrote
Reply to comment by ____ in What to do with a spare VPS? by ____
I2P is pretty straight forward. You can either install the .deb, the java package from I2P's site or use I2P+ which is what I prefer ( https://i2pplus.com/ ). If using the .deb, just make sure you update it afterwards since the package is almost certainly outdated.
If using a VPS, you'll have to tunnel your localhost desktop traffic to it. I do something like:
ssh -fTNL 4444:127.0.0.1:4444 -L 7657:127.0.0.1:7657 -L 7667:127.0.0.1:7667 -L 7658:127.0.0.1:7658 -L 6668:127.0.0.1:6668 user@remote-ip -p XXXX
Port 4444 = local proxy settings (for browsing I2P network sites), 7657 and 7667 for the console UI in your browser (7667 is SSL, 7657 non-ssl), 7658 is the built in webserver and 6668 is IRC. "XXXX" would just be whatever your remote SSH port is if not 22.
Out of the box, stock I2P is... lacking. The system uses "subscription lists" and an "addressbook" to access network sites. ramble.i2p won't work out of the box, simply because it's not published on their stock subscription list, which is about 40 random network sites of which half of them work, half the time. You either have to add sites to your addressbook manually or by using their "address helper links" or using a published subscription list which contains a lot of sites that'll be added to your addressbook. Check out /f/i2p for more on that.
____ OP wrote
Reply to comment by Rambler in What to do with a spare VPS? by ____
Yeah I was thinking of setting up my own pastebin or something, since Pastebin.com applies a lot of censorship nowadays with their "SMART" filter. How does setting up an I2P router work? I have experience with installing i2pd but I wouldn't know how to go from there to make it part of the I2P network.
burnerben wrote
Reply to What to do with a spare VPS? by ____
give it to me lmao
Rambler wrote (edited )
Reply to What to do with a spare VPS? by ____
You can always run an I2P router if you've not used the network before, or contribute to any other network that interests you. (I need to get a Yggdrasil peer up myself)
Depending on the specs you could run a SearX or YaCy search engine/crawler.
Can always use it as just a test/dev box to learn something new. Or can just setup something like a invidious instance or some other open source privacy related project to share with others.
If you're used to one type of OS, can do something you'd usually do on Debian but use CentOS instead, for example.
Or you can be like me and want to kick your screen through the wall dealing with Ubuntu's use of Netplan when you're used to things like ifconfig for networking. Spaces instead of tabs? Fucking really? I have limited experience with it since I primarily use Debian across the board on everything... From desktop OS at home to server-side stuff. But things I find trivial on Debian made me want to Chuck Norris my monitor into a new dimension doing things like trying to add IPV6 addresses to a box. Hard to teach an old dog new tricks I guess.
I also hate Docker but I just don't do well with change and hate that simple looking things like this site require a stupid amount of underlying components and dependencies.
You can do the opposite of what I do and embrace change and learn from it.
Wahaha OP wrote
Reply to comment by !deleted152 in Why cookies don't get deleted from the browser unless whitelisted? by Wahaha
You don't whitelist individual cookies, but domains. Which basically comes down to whitelisting the few sites you have an account and want to stay logged in to. Because that and saving some layout choices is pretty much the only value I've found cookies to provide for users.
div1337 wrote
Yes that's right, they are 99% useless to end users. That's a good idea actually, browsers should really have better cookie management feature
burnerben wrote
Reply to comment by nvuaooay in [Solved] Help Wanted: Can solve this captcha? @nanochan by nvuaooay
mf they making you do calculus for a captcha tf
nvuaooay OP wrote
Reply to comment by burnerben in [Solved] Help Wanted: Can solve this captcha? @nanochan by nvuaooay
Thanks your attention. It's differential calculus. So it's OK that "1" is 1.
burnerben wrote
instead of 1 maybe capitol I
BasedHitler wrote
Reply to by geogo
Can the mod who removed that post explain himself?
KeeJef wrote
Using Lokinet :)
burnerben wrote
Reply to comment by !deleted152 in by Wahaha
i agree 100% and the guy who made this is a kook but the lizard people part raises some questions, mark zuckerberg?????????? lmao
burnerben wrote
Reply to comment by !deleted485 in by Wahaha
god i was worried this whole website had gone to shit
Rambler wrote
Reply to comment by div1337 in How many users do come here through clearnet, onion, i2p, and loki? by nvuaooay
Thanks, I thought I tried that the other day and didn't work but may be it's my i2prouter issue.
Usually I2P is super reliable... I actually have two routers in two different continents optimized for multi-homing to serve as the HTTP tunnel to the site. If the site is up, the I2P site is up.
BUT, the other day I moved everything away from Cloudflare (clearnet site) which meant I had to reissue the SSL certificate. In doing so it borked some of the alternative network configurations I had setup in nginx. For 12-16 hours I2P was inaccessible and that was 100% my fault for not testing each network connection. Somehow I2P and Lokinet was responding funnily afterwards.
I2P should be reliable (again) moving forward.
Rambler wrote
Reply to by Folkov
Wrong forum, so I'm removing this.