XMR, Kaspa or LTC with mweb
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Check trustpilot, Paypal is universally known to be a dis-functional piece of junk. People perma banned for no reason, scammers still using it without issue, transactions are a hit or miss, you need one account by country (if you happen to go overseas and have a bank account there). I used it like 4 times: paid for goods twice, received a salary, sent my wife some money during covid then we got both perma-banned with 0 reasons given.
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idriss@lemm.eeto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Plex staff leaving review on Play Store for PlexEnglish
31·7 months agoDid you read them? somebody is spreading fear for no reason. It almost feels like they want people to use something else.
idriss@lemm.eeto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Plex staff leaving review on Play Store for PlexEnglish
12·7 months agoI had the same thought and I don’t understand why you are being down-voted. All those “security issues” are a minor inconvenience at worst. I went through them twice and I am fine living with them in my publicly exposed instance (publicly just for myself and my wife wherever we are).
idriss@lemm.eeto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What are some of the stupidest, **non-political** takes you've seen on the fediverse?
3·7 months agowent there and down-voted everything
My pleasure! These people have been doing volunteering work for more than 10 years and deserve a lot of love. They had some meal plans also. They are great people and they need a lot of support.
Gave up on gym membership already. Switched to home workouts (check darebee website and youtube) I feel way better with this compared to the gym. You cant have noodle arms also, so get reasonable dumbbells to grow your arm muscles (they are effective and easy to store also)
It s 40min at most daily from home workouts so you need less mental energy to get to it (compared to: prepare backpack, go to gym, interact with people, go back). I am on the Avatar Upgrade program.
I add early morning walks and occasional hikes to spice things up.
the door I was opening shampoo bottle leaving underwear without walking the drawer
piss in carpet
idriss@lemm.eeto
Open Source@lemmy.ml•Firefox, VLC, Gimp, KeePass, LibreOffice among open source software endorsed by French Government
13·8 months agoI use keepassxc + syncthing, super easy to setup and decentralized.
idriss@lemm.eeto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•If you knew the internet was going to be shutdown, damaged, or colossally enshittified what software would you archive for use locally and use for a neighborhood/town mesh network? Why?
122·8 months ago- Fire Zeal and Fetch every API documentation listed there
- Pull latest deepseek models
- Clone entire debian current repo
- Clone Firefox, Linux and the gnu coreutils
- Clone Litecoin and Litewallet
- Download the most recent dump of Wikipedia
- Download all the maps and data available today in OSM
That should do for me
Arabic, French, English, Chinese (mandarin), Russian.
NextCloud is straight up unusable to me no matter how much resources I was throwing at it.
OpenCloud seems promising. I would definitely like to play with it a little. I would also like to check check how can I help with a thing or two there.
This seems like a similar story with matrix Synapse vs Dendrite.
All questions are welcome! By saying it’s intended to tech people earlier I meant if you know what are the different components of an HTTP query, then you know enough to use it.
The end goal is for me to give this my email creds, it will then monitor my email and when I get a match it’ll run the API call, right?
That’s not what I wanted to express. Not requesting your email credentials is an intended design decision (it’s more challenging also). Because personally, if I was a user, I wouldn’t feel comfortable giving my email credentials to a random website online. The alternative solution is to generate an email controlled by the website like I did.
So yeah, the intended use case isn’t to monitor your email address. But rather give you an email address that you can plug in an alerting system for example that would result in a webhook call (that would notify you on matrix or telegram, create a github issue, create Jira ticket,…).
I would use this for email -> matrix but I’d have to self host it. I’m sure others would use it if you had some built in API calls that less techy people could use.
Self hosting isn’t necessary if you don’t want to, you can already add your matrix webhook and generate a random email address you can use. You can configure your current gmail account for example to forward certain or all emails to that randomly generated address and that would trigger a webhook (matrix msg in our example). It involves an extra step (configuring gmail) at the benefit of not having to share your personal creds with a random website online (gossip).
I can provide an example on how to do that if you want to test that.
I do agree with you though on the second part, I will be adding some ready-to-use blocks for the most common services. That’s already a planned feature.
Do you allow users to matched regex from the email and use it the API Call?
For now, it matches on the
From Addressonly (to avoid spamming the API), but it will be very easy to add another field to match on the content or subject of the email if you think it’s a worthy feature.
I have never heard of ActivePieces. I took 30 min now to review it and play with it.
From that alone, I can say:
- you can definitely achieve what gossip does using ActivePieces (in other words, Gossip covers a small subset of what ActivityPieces does if you want to create your email manually and plug it into what they call an IMAP Piece)
- Yep, Gossip is much lighter and reacts instantly thanks to golang concurrency constructs (it’s now running on a tiny VPS there are few jobs and it’s consuming 22MB of RAM, I will be able to keep it free and scale really really high without much struggle)
- Gossip is geared more towards tech people (if you can put together a curl query to cover your needs than you can do almost anything you want - trigger a telegram msg, matrix chat, create a Jira ticket, …)
- Gossip doesn’t handle any complex automations now, it simply connects an email it generates into a webhook you input (that seems to cover all the use cases I needed in my workplace)
The last example will be equivalent to the following curl:
curl -L \ -X POST \ -H "Accept: application/vnd.github+json" \ -H "Authorization: Bearer github_pat_xxxx" \ -H "X-GitHub-Api-Version: 2022-11-28" \ https://api.github.com/repos/idrissbellil/cryptomonitor/issues \ -d '{"title":"Found a bug","body":"I'\''m having a problem with this.","assignees":["idrissbellil"]}'
Thanks for having a look!
Monitor my email and when I get one that matches the regex it’ll make an API call?
It’s this first one with a slight twist. It generates a random email for you rather than asking you to give your username & password (I don’t want to handle securing people’s usernames and emails at this stage). It makes an API call when the
From Emailmatches the regex.Example from demo:
URL: https://api.github.com/repos/idrissbellil/cryptomonitor/issues Method: POST (The HTTP Method: POST, GET, PUT, ..) From Regex: .* (only trigger the call given certain `From` emails so you it doesn't create a thousand tickets if somebody floods you with emails) Payload: {"title":"{{ .Subject }}","body":"{{ .Body }}","assignees":["idrissbellil"]} (the data part of the POST/PUT/even GET query - here you can re-use parts of the email you received like Subject, Body, To, From Headers: {"Accept":"application/vnd.github+json","Authorization":"Bearer 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","X-GitHub-Api-Version":"2022-11-28"}



I am really impressed. Thanks! I will be having a deeper look.
Side note: lemmy.world people are irrationally triggered by some stuff you mentioned: blockchain and cryptocurrencies (this is the same as being triggered by ssh 🤣), or religion, … Keep that in mind while you read 'the feedback" here.