JustinAngel

joined 2 years ago
[–] JustinAngel 1 points 2 years ago (5 children)

Agreed, but we have to trust the instances we keep accounts on. Trust is subjective, but I certainly wouldn't trust a government ran instance for anything other than an outlet for information originating from the owning government.

If I run a private instance or know the maintainer of another, then I can have greater confidence in the security/privacy implementations.

[–] JustinAngel 10 points 2 years ago
[–] JustinAngel 2 points 2 years ago
[–] JustinAngel 5 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (14 children)

Probably a poor decision to be creating accounts on government operated instances. Since they own the server, they're in a position to:

  1. Siphon credentials and attempt reuse to gain access to distinct services
  2. Ban individual accounts
  3. Censor based on post content

I'm all for government support and adoption of open-source software so long as they're not in the position to disrupt how it's used by the public at large.

Edit (my perspective is relevant, but doesn't apply in this case): My nerd impulses outran my willingness to read the link's content. Seems it's not for public registration.

Edit 2: Like my cornbread eating American ass can read Dutch anyway 🤣

[–] JustinAngel 0 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

TBF, scientific studies seem to support that ketosis can influence/mitigate neurological conditions. The ketogenic diet was originally developed as a method of managing epilepsy, for instance.

The "classic" ketogenic diet is a special high-fat, low-carbohydrate diet that helps to control seizures in some people with epilepsy.

Personally, I'm giving it a try to assist with migraine management, per this study:

In total, 17 patients (73.9%) reported a reduction in the headache days, and 15 patients (65.2%) reported a reduction in headache days of at least 50% and were considered as responders.

The study itself had 23 patients iirc, so I'm sure more research needs to be done, but I'd like to avoid daily medications due to some of the undesirable side effects and I'm in good enough health to accept the risk for a few months.

[–] JustinAngel 1 points 2 years ago

Sure can! It's a bit involved and there are security considerations to take into account. Those who deploy their own instance have to make sure the underlying services are well-configured and patched. This happened yesterday, for instance. Hard to know the exact scope of the compromise, but in bad circumstances it could have compromised everyone's credentials who has registered on lemmy.world. I've no reason to believe that's the case....just saying it's a thing.

[–] JustinAngel 3 points 2 years ago

Just started learning about the fediverse but I suspect everything goes down with the ship. Sort of creates a development opportunity for community driven backup utilities, though. Interesting problems are fun development challenges :)

[–] JustinAngel 16 points 2 years ago (2 children)

I just joined and I suspect that you're correct: there's an overall learning curve. No snarky tone intended, but explaining decentralization to those who would likely struggle with grasping the basic client/server model is going to be challenge.

Shoot, I've got 10 years pentesting and R&D under my belt and it took me a while to weigh the pros and cons of creating an account on a public instance or self-hosting. (Will self-host eventually...enjoying a test drive.)

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