Why not leave it open? Haha, I’m just finding this thread a month later and would like a shirt…
Why not leave it open? Haha, I’m just finding this thread a month later and would like a shirt…
Hell yeah now Linux and I both will panic in style
Everything reminds me of her…
Note to future self: suggest this for consideration at book club
Here’s what you do: go to the store and buy 3-5 dandruff shampoos with different active ingredients and cycle between them every time you wash your hair and face (don’t shy away from smearing the shampoo on your face as well). Also, leave it on there a few minutes before rinsing.
Also vitamin D oil is great for face and beard.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B0BGMCLC4J
This shampoo is great to add into the rotation. The same company makes a face cream that is super good, too.
More or less, yes, but they only work in specific, emulated test environments unless you play Apple’s game and get them verified and signed and eventually in the App Store. The latest EU/GDPR stuff might change this a bit, though.
Yeah, I’d assumed it would respect the —metric=false flag when building with docker run, but docker-compose is ostensibly supported and easier to work with. I was able to successfully change other configuration options (such as setting the db to use MySQL instead of the default SQLite) using the docker-compose ‘command’ block, but the metric flag specifically was ignored. It’s entirely possible that this is a bug and not an intentional attempt to hoover up user data. Either way, data collection should be opt-in by default (by law, imo).
All depends on what you collect, how it’s stored, how transparent you are about it, and how easy it is to opt out of. It can definitely be done well.
I thought I’d give this a shot, but the metrics/data collection flag was turned on by default and when I added a command to my docker-compose to turn them off, it was ignored. Then, I created an account and looked for a way to turn them off in the settings and there was none. You expect people interested in self-hosting OSS to be cool with sending data out of their network every time the server is started, a memo is created, a comment is created, a webhook is dispatched, a resource or a user is created?! Also, the metrics are collected by a 3rd party with their own ToS that could change at any time?
Holy hell, hard pass. I’d rather use a piece of paper.
Lmk if you find out. Maybe something with… lasers?