You’re right, Google released their vision in 2023, here is what it says regarding lifespan:
a reduction of TLS server authentication subscriber certificate maximum validity from 398 days to 90 days. Reducing certificate lifetime encourages automation and the adoption of practices that will drive the ecosystem away from baroque, time-consuming, and error-prone issuance processes. These changes will allow for faster adoption of emerging security capabilities and best practices, and promote the agility required to transition the ecosystem to quantum-resistant algorithms quickly. Decreasing certificate lifetime will also reduce ecosystem reliance on “broken” revocation checking solutions that cannot fail-closed and, in turn, offer incomplete protection. Additionally, shorter-lived certificates will decrease the impact of unexpected Certificate Transparency Log disqualifications.
Nothing of value was lost when EV certificates disappeared.
even more secure with the 90 days policy.
I meant certbot with nginx plugin and http-01 challenge.
You’re right, ssl.com offers this, too.
IMO, sticking to manual processes that are error-prone is a waste of money and not a sign of a honest business.
AFAIK, the only reason not to use Letsencrypt are when you are not able to automate the process to change the certificate.
As the paid certificates are valid for 12 month, you have to change them less often than a letsencrypt certificate.
At work, we pay something like 30-50€ for a certificate for a year. As changing certificates costs, it is more economical to buy a certificate.
But generally, it is best to use letsencrypt when you can automate the process (e.g. with nginx).
As for the question of trust: The process of issuing certificates is done in a way that the certificate authority never has access to your private key. You don’t trust the CA with anything (except your payment data maybe).
At least for me, this works out of the box.
Some requirements:
This community has only two posts and a few comments. The algorithm has very few information on such tiny communities.
It would probably be useful to only include communities with a minimum amount of interaction to avoid such outliers.
deleted by creator
Oops, sorry ^^
A simple cron job with youtube-dl works also fine.
Edit: But thanks for your suggestion! I’ll take a look
Edit 2: TubeArchivist looks nice, but way over my personal needs. Also, its performance requirements are quite high for my small server (4 Cores, 4 GB RAM). I’ll keep my small, scripted solution (yt-dl + store to nextcloud folders).
Is it possible to submit a channel and download all the videos (also new videos when they are released).
Foldable phones - at least the early generations hat lots of troubles with the hinges and scratched screens.
Still as of today, testers are undecided if these category of devices really has a benefit compared to just buying both a tablet and a phone (and still saving money).
Based on the complexitiy of this setup, you need to be quite enthusiastic about your homelab.
I’m on lemmy a lot, but have not seen your site yet. But I’m hesitant to register for a site to find out where to register.
Also, you seem to have a list of servers, where I was able to suggest one country. feddit.org serves the german-speaking fediverse, and that is at least four countries (if you count Liechtenstein).
Most users that are not from the english-speaking world can just join one of the few servers in their language:
Source: join-lemmy.org
This used to be possible, but isn’t anymore. Source: the author of lutris
Yes, that is why many big tech companies have their european hq there.
Edit: Wikipedia on Ireland as a tax haven