Is this a hot take? You’re absolutely correct lol.
Is this a hot take? You’re absolutely correct lol.
I get these vibes when WASM introduced C# to the frontend via Blazor.
Feels wrong. Feels like it shouldn’t be possible.
But binaries on the frontend are so. cot. dayum. fast
Blazor has been my favourite framework to do my side projects in for the past couple years now.
The DNS resolution, assuming you’re just using your ISP’s DNS authority servers, is still very much known to your ISP.
They can still identify my traffic, where I’m going, what I’m browsing, etc.
With a VPN that you can trust, that emphasizes user privacy, that doesn’t store PII, that doesn’t comply with local law enforcement short of being issued a warrant, all my ISP sees is I keep routing encrypted web traffic to an IP that they can identify is a machine somewhere in the Netherlands.
And besides that they know absolutely fuck all.
Without the VPN they can identify the IPs I make https requests to belong to beehaw, belong to imgur, belong to Netflix, belong to some torrenting site, etc etc.
This is the one I came to post about. The fact there’s a library for this is so stupid to me.
I feel like it demonstrates how npm and modules have probably to some degree gotten out of hand.
Plex and a web app I wrote for a Twitch community I moderate.
Plex is on a server in the Netherlands and the web app is just AWS. I would’ve hosted on some spare hardware but my internet is notoriously trash and I didn’t want to risk it going down while people are playing in the app.
Plex I might move onto a NAS at some point but I’m just too lazy lol.
Where did you get that mouse mat?? I have a mighty need!
NPM’s left-pad library has entered the chat