

Also check out meshcentral. Important thing aboout meshcentral is that it lets you hijack the users screen, show you can show them step by step through things. RDP doesn’t do that, it kicks the other user out.


Also check out meshcentral. Important thing aboout meshcentral is that it lets you hijack the users screen, show you can show them step by step through things. RDP doesn’t do that, it kicks the other user out.


No, because proton is not Windows. Wine only works on Linux, so it’s actually a Linux platform. I consider every developer/publisher who targets proton to actually be targeting Linux, rather than windows. Every single time a windows update breaks something that continues to work on proton I laugh
See also: https://steamcommunity.com/app/221410/discussions/8/1734336452576620754/?l=czech


Yes but the steam runtime is basically an entire Linux installation (that never gets updated) that valve drags onto your system. I found it greatly annoying when I wanted to use Steam Input (because that would make Nintendo Switch pro controllers work) on a laptop with 32 gb of storage and steam dragged along 4 gb of ubuntu that I was never going to touch (since I was playing games outside of steam using wine directly).


By the way: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shadow_IT


So, my high school used to have a domain/ip whitelist. The trick to get around whitelists is to take advandage of the fact that whole subdomains or cloud providers would be included in the whitelist.
Any duckdns subdomain, or anything hosted on many cloud providers would be unblocked.
So holy unblocker has a one click deploy, which can deploy to PaaS sites which would usually have their entire ip address space and subdomains included in the whitelist.


You should probably migrate now, forgejo is currently a soft fork that is fully compatible, but in the future they are planning to hard fork and not be compatible. Well, they are in the process of doing so right now.


Second comment, but also check out midpoint by evoloum: https://docs.evolveum.com/iam/
It is a modern web frontend on top of Active Directory.


Use an Identity Provider (IDP)*. Other people have mentioned LDAP, which can play this role.
Use groups within the IDP to declare who has what privileges.
Apps using the IDP for auth can read the groups and allow/deny permissions based on groups.
*Or Identity and Access Management if you are in the cloud ig.
For open source solutions, I would recommend:
These three solutions all have invites, ldap, and can act as oauth providers. (Oauth is single sign on), which are the features I want. There are also integrated, including it all in the one app.
There is also LLDAP, which is a web ui for ldap, and then you could use a service that connects to that, like authelia or keycloak, to add oauth on top.


No, Socks5 does not work for this usecase. You don’t get permissions to run it locally via crostini (or use crostini in general) and the relevant proxy settings are locked in the chromebook settings. In addition to this, it is too easy to fingerprint, and some of the more aggressive setups will catch it and block it. For example, my high school would autodetect wireguard and then kick you off of the network for 10 minutes if you attempted to connect.


These kinds of setups are used to bypass agressive network filtering and content censhorship. All the traffic is http(s). And then the way only a browser is needed means it works on locked down devices like chromebooks.
The browser in docker is something I have used, but it requires more resources to host and can only be used by one person at once if you are using something like linuxserver’s webtop.


Yeah you want the titanium networks projects, which are essentially a bunch of web proxies exactly like what you ask for.
I used to use Metallic, but it’s not actually that good and not maintained anymore.
Here is a public instance of holy unblocker: https://uc.robby.blue/scramjet
This is one of their flagship projects, and is what you want. Self hostable of course, code on github. I preferred the projects that give you internal tabs though, like hypertabs or anura.
Public anura instance: https://anura.pro/ (but anura looks like a pain to self host, it’s much more complex)


This requires manually enabling every additional provider.
No, it doesn’t. The docs are confusing on this, but forgejo has two methods to enable oauth/oidc. One is to manually enable them, but there is a second, where people bring their own openid link.
The docs contain 3 things related to oauth:
Do you use the web ui?
I use the web ui heavily, but it’s only packaged by the incus package from the author, and not included in the debian packages.
Also, what are you using for authentication?
I (plus friends who do something similar) have been using centralized auth systems for this stuff. Proxmox supports OIDC, so if you are using Authentik or something similar you can just use one password.
And then Authentik supports 2FA, so you can use TOTP with that, or use passwords only.
In addition to netbox, a wiki or other knowledgebase would be nice. You can document setup procedures as you go, and then other people can use that to figure stuff out.


Forgejo has a feature (that people usually disable) where you can bring your own openid connect url and use it to auth. So if I have my own OIDC provider I am self hosting, I can just use that to log in.
Most people only use OIDC for google and microsoft and whatnot but it’s very possible. I don’t realkly see what FedCM offers that OIDC doesn’t or can’t, or why we shouldn’t be adding features to the existing and popular OIDC instead.
The problem is that real dumb phones are hard to find. Many modern “dumb phones” are actually full android devices, complete with a boatload of spyware that helps keep the cost of the device itself low.
KaiOS is better but that’s a whole linux distro, with similar issues.
Since you mentioned tethering, do you have an example of a non android (or at least one that’s not preloaded with a ton of spyware) dumbphone that supports usb tethering? I am skeptical that a real dumbphone would have this feature.


My one fear with this is offline authentication. I enjoy oauth/oidc a lot, but it doesn’t have mechanisms for machines to continue to be able to authenticate while offline, like the way ldap/kerberos can do.
Is this just for machines that will always be online? I can understand that usecase but :/
EDIT: Okay, one comment, mentions himmelblau an alternative to authd, which seems to be more mature. Himmelblau has docs about offline usage. It looks like it has an emergency config that can use a cached password from the oidc provider,
Single-factor authentication (SFA-only) users and Hello-PIN users already have offline sign-in capability
Hmmm. Okay. Upon doing further reseach, it looks like offline authentication is exclusive to Microsoft Entra ID. :/


Syncthing has encryption as well. You can have a device be “untrusted” so you put in an encryption password, and data sent to and stored on that device will be encrypted.
Although this does encrypt file (and directory) names, the caveats about folder structure and modification time still apply.
Mindustry (open source)