

You might get something out of it from a thinking model (you probably shouldn’t try with a regular one), but don’t trust it 100%
You might get something out of it from a thinking model (you probably shouldn’t try with a regular one), but don’t trust it 100%
woops, you’re completely right. Got fucked by an LLM. I thought I had checked but it seems like I only did for mastodon and trusted it for the rest
Mailcow seems to be on GPL, not AGPL as well
My bad. I was searching for examples but that’s still bad
That’s for deployed services that others are using.
What I meant to say is that it’s a public mastodon, gitea, mailcow instance
then talk to a lawyer who specializes in copyright for your jurisdiction
It would be a nice answer, but I’m not going to if I’m not going to make money with the projects. I can’t justify this spending
In all cases, copyright generally only applies to distribution. If you do not distribute any code or software, you are most likely fine.
With AGPL, if people use the derivative work over the web, you have to provide the source and document the modifications that were made
Why would it with GPL? AGPL is GPL with an added clause
If I create a script that interacts with the API it’s not considered a part of the software then?
I do and it’s great for small tasks. Wouldn’t trust it on an existing code base or more than a hundred lines of code.
I always review what it does and often cherry pick stuff
The only thing I vibe code are small websites / front ends because fuck HTML,CSS,JS
People can’t be bothered to run better messaging apps. Expecting them to change OS is crazy
For sure
The problem is being able to do this on all devices, and easily
But sadly with manual, we also lose the ability to do mail searching
You’re completely right. I wrote privacy instead of anonymity
If you want to protect yourself from the ads industry an like having your own domain, then it’s pretty good
If only you or your relatives use the domain, it’s pretty easy to link all the addresses. It’s pretty fair to assume that if a search doesn’t give anything, the domain is probably personal or used by a few people at best
My point was that using a custom domain makes you less anonymous than being on the regular proton domain
If you do not use aliases, it won’t change much, but at least your identity is not directly tied to the domain name
This domain will be linked to your identity, so USA will know your identity if they want to, and all emails under that domain will be associated to you (doesn’t really change anything if you weren’t going to use aliases anyways)
Own domain = rip privacy in many cases
New instance found!
Instance checks out
*For the USA government only