Yikes, how Draconian. Id be fucking pissed if someone came in and forcibly open sourced a product I had invested millions in developing.
That's overly complicated for some of the users - most of them aren't very tech savvy, and they're watching via all kinds of devices - TV's, iOS, Kindle, etc.
I don't see any major security reason for access requiring a VPN. Are there particular vulnerabilities that you're concerned about, or just those that generally come from having a web-facing service?
A VPN would not be practical for my situation, as the instance is used by various family members and friends. I'm happy for them to use my JF instance but I'm not providing VPN services as well.
If you're not referring to any specific vulnerabilities in JF then I feel confident there are no exceptional risks from allowing web access to JF? Just the usual ones?
Does jellyfin have known vulnerabilities for bots to exploit? It's been up for several years with, afaik, no problems.
System has usual steps taken to harden it, JF is behind an apache proxy, letsencrypt handles ssl certs, fail2ban is running, and users are required to have strong passwords with no option to reset or self-register.
They're not a joke, they're a product called Seawing, made by a French company. They're being being actively tested and can be retro fitted to existing vessels rather than requiring a new design.
That would be amazingly impractical. May as well say "what if all website were forced to be .txt files".
Most website template frameworks (Bootstrap/Foundation) etc rely on Javascript for basic UI features. Imagine having to wait for the server to toggle a simple CSS class on your page any time the user wants to view a menu, togle a button, or view a popup/modal/lightbox/whatever.
Blah blah blah... Dude, just clean your damned dishes. Whatever you copy paste from articles it seems pretty obvious that leaving out food waste to reuse it is a pretty bad idea.
So you thought leaving food waste in brine was safe because it would only kill the bad bacteria?
@stom
@lemmy.world