[-] StarSyth@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

Lets say you buy groceries but don't have a fridge, your next door neighbor offers to share their fridge as its massive, makes sense. However if you own a fridge, why would you use your neighbors fridge?

[-] StarSyth@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

simple rule, if you don't want something viewable by others then don't expose it to the internet. Its not a complicated rule, however many people fail this simple bit of logic.

An example, family photos, holiday videos, music and tv shows. All things that don't really matter if someone gains access to. It's at most an invasion of privacy.

Another example, bank statements, birth certificates, financial documents, scans of your credit and debit card, IoT. These are all things that pose a potential risk to you if someone gains access to them. Don't put them on the internet, nobody can ever find them on the internet.

The internet by its very nature is built to share data, the easiest way to avoid sensitive data from being breached is to not have it on a device connected to the net in the first place.

[-] StarSyth@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

Its only daunting if you want to do everything from scratch. Depending on your needs you could easily build off an existing platform for home labs and servers. Its more of a tinker / experiment / use existing, then reverse engineer the parts you need to.

A good article on Home Server OS is here:
https://www.smarthomebeginner.com/best-home-server-os-2023/

You can Find some good Self-Hosting projects / apps here:
https://selfhosted.libhunt.com/

And finally, here are two examples of decent, simple to install all-in-one solutions, Yunohost is my go to for friends who want to start self-hosting as it sets up everything including SSO, DNS (via Adguard Home) and Certs via Lets Encrypt all in a nice web gui and admin panel.

Yunohost:
https://yunohost.org/#/

HomelabOS:
https://homelabos.com/

StarSyth

joined 1 year ago