Absolutely!
If anyone is interested here’s a great thread on it
Absolutely!
If anyone is interested here’s a great thread on it
Just be cautious when moving or backing up the files, things like rsync and bakula have specific flags needed to preserve symlinks.
Checkout plexamp as your client if you use plex
You can however run any LXC which you can definitely do natively.
Where’s that in the documentation?
Correct, so when I post my song I created to Funkwhale, it’s then federated across the fediverse, living on other servers and able to be downloaded.
Let’s say I use the wikimedia license and allow reproduction of my music as long as I’m credited.
Someone in the fediverse likes my song and they download it. Then use it in their licensed DRM enabled media and give me no credit.
Who then protects my license and attribution rights beside myself? Does this open up others in the fediverse who hosted my media and allowed download to suit? The courts that would hear the case are unlikely to provide a distinction between the user who stole my media and those hosting it.
What prevents Funkwhale from charging a fee for their streaming app and profiting from my song and cutting me out of profit share? Which is exactly what digital distributors do all the time.
How does Funkwhale prevent the upload and sharing of licensed music by unlicensed parties?
None of this is referenced in the documentation or ad copy on the site.
I’ve seen funkwhale posted here multiple times, and these questions are never addressed.
That’s fair enough, so who handles licensing. How do you protect the copy left aspect of your music? How do you prevent your work from being freebooted?
The publishing referenced in the ad copy. There’s no talk of how licensing is handled or who hosts what where. Just because it starts off as OSS and self hosted does not mean it stays that way.
What if we added a P2P element so we could share our music and own it instead of streaming it? Oh wait, that’s soulseek.
Who keeps posting this? This feels inches away from a monetized subscription service.
You have a permissions issue with pg_logical/snapshots": Permission denied. Check that your volumes exist in /var/lib/docker/container (or something close) and that the user running docker can create a test file in the local directory (likely a db directory in the docker root)
What’s your docker-compose.yml look like? Especially any volume mounts
Kind of, yeah. That’s why I replied with it.
Their pricing structure doesn’t affect what I have hosted and I’m selfhosting email in dockermail. My whois is still anonymized how I like.
GDRP and anonymous hosting. Pretty great.
I’m running proxmox on that same machine with a 9 node k8s cluster serving zabbix, zammad, coreDNS, three Grav sites and it’s also the SAN for my Longhorn implementation as It’s got a 10gig sfp+ card in it. Powerdraw sits at around 630 watts on average. It’s in a corosync cluster with an R720xd and my old gaming PC.
It’s got plenty of room for you to grow if electricity is cheap, they make great ISCSI servers and also baremetal DBs if you outgrow it completely.
Also look at tomato for a router OS as well. I’d suggest the Asus AC1750
Any of the ARM based routers are great though.
https://wiki.freshtomato.org/doku.php/hardware_compatibility
What’s your filesystem? What is your storage setup currently? Can you get to a shell on the running OS?
You might want to boot to a live linux usb/disk/ISO mount your filesystem/drive that is full and delete your cached files from that.
Here’s how to clear tables on a regular basis https://lemmy.world/post/207421?scrollToComments=true
Here’s how to clear your cache in your postgres DB https://stackoverflow.com/questions/68816441/clearing-cache-in-postgresql
I would strongly suggest standing up your self hosted instance in a docker container if you haven’t already
https://blog.colic.io/2023/07/07/self-hosting-lemmy-a-step-by-step-guide-with-docker-compose/
Also now might be a good idea to look at grabbing a cheap external drive and backing up to that as a worst case.
https://join-lemmy.org/docs/administration/backup_and_restore.html
Another competitor you might be interested in is teleport. You can self host but it’s a bit convoluted to get to the documentation so I posted a how to at the very bottom of this replay. It’s very easy to setup and is free as in beer as long as you don’t connect to any of their cloud stuff.
https://goteleport.com/how-it-works/
https://github.com/gravitational/teleport/blob/master/docker/README.md
Then you might be interested in the last link I shared in my post.
Use rclone