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452 lines
40 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2411
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Title: HPR2411: Information Underground: Co-op Paradise
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2411/hpr2411.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 02:29:26
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---
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This is HBR episode 2,411 entitled Information Underground, co-op paradise.
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It is hosted by Lost in Bronx and is about 45 minutes long and currently in a clean flag.
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The summary is DeepGeek, Klaatu and Lost in Bronx discuss their long-running server co-operative.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by AnanasThost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR-15. That's HBR-15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at AnanasThost.com.
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Okay, welcome to Hacker Public Radio and Information Underground on Hacker Public Radio.
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This is DeepGeek and I have with me Lost in Bronx.
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Hey everybody.
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And I have with me Klaatu.
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Hello everyone and what some people who know the old information underground episodes
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that we had independently might know and what many modern HPRs might not know is
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we started a long and fruitful relationship over having a co-op for web hosting and I wanted to
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I thought it would be nice to talk about that just in case any Hacker Public Radio people
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are considering doing something along similar lines and perhaps they can avoid some pitfalls
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and save some grief. I think that would be a nice thing.
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So we got interested. I did a retro computing episode on the Go for Protocol and we all got
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very enthusiastic three of us and no one was offering Go for Hosting anymore.
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So we had to get out there and get a VPS license to do it ourselves.
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And we also decided to as Klaatu once said and what was the show you used to do Klaatu?
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Bad apples wasn't?
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No, not on his own but the one he did with the three other guys.
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Oh geez, Linux Cranks?
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Yeah, I think it was Linux Cranks where you said DeepGeek's taste of sulfur run to the
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simple and easily managed.
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I want to have just a very old school classic web server not Apache.
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I wanted to do TTPD which is a single binary that does slash tilde hosting and multiple domains
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and stuff but it is just a very very small basic minimalist thing which we all thought was
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well suited to transferring audio files and we all had podcasts going on.
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And I also want to do secure email because I don't trust anybody else for my email anymore
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and all that stuff that came out about the NSA afterwards anyway proved me right.
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So we got together and I think Klaatu had an application where he really needed port forwarding
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right Klaatu?
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Yeah, yeah because I was in cafes a lot at the time needed some secure connections, yeah.
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All right, so we needed SSH, HTTP and GoFur and so we got a slice and everyone
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threw itself the bill on split three ways and we tried to run it under the idea of technical democracy.
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Do you guys remember the emails going back and forth about how we should do things?
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I still have them, I just don't have all those.
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I'd have to search but I didn't I didn't delete any of that stuff.
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To my memory to be fair it basically all boiled down to no deep geek you're making it too
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complicated just do something and leave us alone.
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And every now and then deep geek it was working.
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Why do you want to change?
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Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, it was it was like that and and yet I always want to to push
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an envelope a little bit further and to offer another service.
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So I want to say technical democracy doesn't work.
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I mean it's it's like trying to tell you dog that there's a dog on the TV set with a dog doesn't
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want to look at the TV you know it's best to have people be in charge of some aspect of it
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and let them do it and make that to be a very limited aspect of it you know.
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Also when you do these things you don't have a support staff to call in times of trouble.
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This is true how much of a burden was that for you?
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Let me because you were ultimately our our admin on these things by and large.
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What kind of a burden was that for you and what kind of a learning curve was it for you
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specifically about this part of it?
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It was it was a burden because I would I would sometimes have to go home instead of go to my
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in-laws to fix a problem but not very often and since we were such a tight-knit partnerships
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since we all became very close but not physically close but very close over the over the network
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friends. You guys were always very understanding about the turnaround time being so long.
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Well they helped that no one had mission critical stuff going through that too you know.
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I was just going to say I don't remember it taking long I was I always honestly felt that you
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were more responsive on this co-op than for instance what I had an alternative to use which
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was SDF which nothing against SDF but they just sometimes they went down for periods of time and
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just could not I you know and I was just out of luck whereas your your stuff just always seemed
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to be available. Yeah that that might be more of a tribute to this software selection than
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anything else. Well you were very careful yeah I must I must to anybody thinking in these terms
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it's important that can't be underestimated. Yeah. The fact that you made choices based on
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robustness and and that was primary. You didn't want stuff that was finicky or and you weren't
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constantly upgrading and upgrading and upgrading so that's made a you know big difference
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over well it's been how many years now we've been doing this. Well Clat 2 left the co-op and you and
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I have stuck with it and then the Freemasons one Freemasonic group came in because they wanted
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an email server. They wanted a list server. So it's been going on for probably 10 years I think.
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What kind of feedback have you gotten from this Freemason group about their email server?
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Are they happy with that? I should I should say I shouldn't should have said list server they
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they needed a way to notify they're up to 50 members or so and so yeah they are happy with it
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they they they kind of the rank and file kind of wasn't kicking and screaming a little bit but
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because they want but everyone had their own list their own membership lists that were they
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were constantly doing a thing where you swap membership lists back and forth and try to merge them.
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You can imagine. Wow right yeah wow and when I got up to 50 the the grand pruber and I sat down
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and said there has to be a better way is what happened and it turns out that mailman was the
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better way by then and in the wake of Clat 2 leaving you and I made a very telling and distinctive
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choice where we actually chose to have two servers we chose to have a unlimited professional
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web host outfit that gave you the right to have you know act as a provider yourself so we can give
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each other control panels and so we have 24 seven support for mission critical stuff as you say
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as well as keeping a more experimental server offshore that I administer and does useful things
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like email and the services that we can't get elsewhere like gofer and shell service and shell
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services gone I think yeah and that's too bad because there are so many wonderful things that can
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be done with it you know if I wanted to and there have been times when I have I've been able to
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SSH in to our server are our little you know shell service if you want to put it that way and then
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from there I've been FTPing things elsewhere because for whatever reason I needed that capability
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at that time I mean that can't be replaced you there's there's no way I could have done what I
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wanted to do simply for my own home and I think it's a sad statement that thing like SDF is it
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almost seems like an anachronism doesn't it I mean so many people talk about it in the past tense
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and that's a that's a sad thing you know that's a sad thing there was SDF is is almost a legacy
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service when there was a time when they were everywhere there were all over the place yeah but I
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mean I mean I remember holding on to them for email for the longest time until I found they were
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using they weren't using a cryptid email and then the and the same thing blew up and that was that
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but you you actually witnessed a long-term outage and you actually witnessed didn't you
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lost in Bronx them saying when it's my hosting going to be up and the guy saying as soon as I can
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didn't you have an accent like that yeah that was a long time ago and I understand that that was
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not the first time it had happened and it wasn't the last time it happened I'm still I'm still on
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SDF and and yeah I wouldn't it's just not you it's not mission critical you just cannot treat it
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that way it it is a luxury and if it's there you're it's a good day and if it if if it's not then
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that's just that's that day then I was on SDF myself for a while and that was my impression as well
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at that time and it was one honestly it was one of the motivating factors for my wanting to
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participate in our little co-op I was very interested in Gofer and SDF offers Gofer even to this day
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they offer Gofer and they have a they are the single biggest Gofer presence in the entire Gofer
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sphere if you want to put it that way there are more Gofer pages originating out of SDF than
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probably anywhere else is what I really mean and yet it didn't feel like it was adequate to me
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now Gofer was my only internet presence at all for a period of years all of my content that I
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put together all went out through my Gofer page eventually I wanted something that you know more
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I guess more popular you know more people able to see it but you know who was it it was Clat 2 and
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I actually approached deep geek if we're talking about the history of this thing Clat 2 and I
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actually talked to each other and said boy it wouldn't it be great if we had something ourselves
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and we said who do we think would be good and would know about this stuff and that we would really
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trust and the first and only name that came to mind was deep geek really that's a fact you didn't
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know that but no I didn't know that thank you I'm flattered I'm very flattered so where do I
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want to go with this we the pitfalls we ran into besides the issues of technical democracy also
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we followed around web hosting choices because whereas I chose this very simple web hosting thing
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wasn't there a mime issue that kind of blew up in your face Clat 2 that sounds vaguely familiar
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yes I don't remember the details about it but I we didn't switch or did we switch to
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how high a watha for that purpose was that why we switched to high a watha I think it was that yeah
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you were there for the switch and we switched to high a watha for being able to update mime types
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as opposed to having them hard coded as right as well as built in anti hammering protection
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and that's why we switched to high a watha what did we have before that we had thtpd
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and I remember that that program used to be the backbone or the the the most popular server
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back in the dial up days actually where each dial up provider was also a was also providing home pages
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remember home pages oh yeah well I actually still technically have one with my host right now if I
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want to you know I even have an email address I have never once logged into with my host you know
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and they probably sent me all sorts of notices through there that I've never seen but yeah
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it still exists people still get them yeah I mean most people I listen to a show from from
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radio national australia called download this show all about internet and media and they said the
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other day they said uh yeah the day of driving people back to your own website is over you got
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to stay on facebook or twitter and I was just saddened by that statement I was like I remember home
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pages and you know the guy in the street doesn't have a home page anymore no the average person doesn't
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a home page I mean some businesses don't know I mean you know like local a couple local businesses
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that I know like what if I ever ask them where to find them online they refer to me to a Facebook
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page that is very very common now yeah I mean I mean wow I mean it makes you feel like a real
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walking and aquanism it really does but it isn't just about the web page all right and that
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circumstances it's not just that it's a community they're hoping to build around whatever service
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of product that they're offering and that's a built-in functionality of something like Facebook
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the fact that if I have my thing if people follow me I instantly have a community that I can
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reach out to yeah that Facebook is very good now I am on Facebook these days what about you too
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never no no not at all no not at all yeah so yeah the interface is really good I really I really
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like what the company built as far as the user experiences and that the fact that you have a
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following you have you you post something and you're following seasons really good but the things
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that they're their business model how they make the money to support themselves I really disagree
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with but I'm suffering from a bit of a network effect because everyone I know is on Facebook
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and that's why I won't get involved yeah well yeah no I don't need more ghosts from the past thank you
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but I have to say bring it back to our co-op one of the advantages of that is that I have been
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able to create my own platform now I don't have an awful lot of play if you want to put it that
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way I don't have an awful lot of mind share regarding my own stuff but I do have my own sites that
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I have you know I am a writer and I'm an audio book guy and I've created sites specifically for
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my audio books and it is this platform this co-op that we have done together that has allowed me
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to do that right and I don't your newsletter helps a lot lost in Bronx I mean like that to me
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your stupid little email newsletter that you send out not stupid but I mean that is so lame
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that that's what it is and every time I get it in my email inbox I feel like like we just had
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a coffee together you know it like brings it so close to you because it's like a newsletter and I
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know it's going out to 30 other people but it feels like you emailed me personally to give me
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an update on your life well part of that a part of that is calculated as you understand I'm writing
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it specifically in order to be engaging you know obviously you must understand that yeah but also
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first off that's not coming out of our co-op too I must make that point that's that's a mail
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chip that I'm using which is a proprietary service okay but also that don't you use like a service
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for the web page hosting then drive them back to the download service in the co-op
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the web page the web page is done through was create specifically for the first off my audio
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diaries right I do a popular regular podcast called lnb's audio diary I also have a website devoted
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to my first book my second book and my third book in my star drifter series chiching chiching
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which are all fantastic science fiction okay thank you thank you but all of that stuff including
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the the audio diary all of that stuff is created through a free open source software application
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called podcast generator and this is hosted on the server on our our I should say in our in our co-op
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okay it is through this co-op that I have this web presence you know I also have a page that's
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hosted separately and I have you know I have content spread all over the place like most of us do
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but the fact is the core like if you want my content if you want my content for free
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that probably the easiest place to get it is through this co-op through this thing that we
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constructed ourselves I think that's important because it gives me control over what I've got
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because I'm frank I could tell you stories but I have put my stuff up through other platforms
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that have then turned around and not been what I thought they were you know time changes their
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needs change but they didn't change in a direction that worked for me this is something I control
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you know there's there is no other way to have the final say and what it is you want to do on
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the internet unless you really have hands on to some degree you know again if something goes wrong
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I'm always on the phone deep geek saying help me help me because I'm ignorant that's not my strength
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but the fact is I trust this guy you know and if there's a problem ultimately that's the guy I
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can turn to yeah and I gotta say the control factor is very important was because when I was doing
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the newscast I was very afraid of getting like a libel suit or a slander suit or something because
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I was pretty outspoken and when I interviewed people that sometimes they would say literally in
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the interview they would say why even one guy said outright city council and so on so is the
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most corrupt person I've ever encountered in my life I would just be like literally proofing it
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I was listening to the headphones jogger I literally tripped over my own feet and skid my leg
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you know I was like I gotta publish this to another country I just
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sue me over there something like um but yeah as far as the ultimate say it's concerned this is
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this is if you want to have that ironclad control this is it and can I say I just want to inject
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that you know we we have touched on the challenges you've had but I would like you to at least
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expound a little bit on the convenience of this I mean as you said in an email to me once about
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the gopher server that it has quote minimal maintenance and in the parentheses you wrote as in
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none on yeah go for is is oh man it is just totally obsolete I mean it's it's not the it's not
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the frame primo tool for transferring large files you know it they'll do it but it's not the primo
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tool for it but I think it's the primo tool for writing markup either or what is hyper hypertext you
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know it's just it's yeah it's just so quirky it is bizarre and hypertext is bad obviously but if
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you stick with the gopher map concept not every gopher server supports a gopher map but if you
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can stick with the gopher map honest to god this thing is flawless it really does work very very well
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it is it is just so dead simple you you just install I just install it when I we've gone through
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three iterations of the part we run ourselves now right yeah at least yeah I think it was three
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yeah we're number three and we're looking at number four yes yes yeah and um and and it's literally
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the second thing installed after secure shell server and it's initiated and left alone it's
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initiated you put the files in the directory and it works and this the pie gopher d is one of the
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two the other ones written in pearl but the python gopher server also has a web interface so it
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automatically detects if a web browser's accessing it and gives it an html interface if that's
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what the user wants or you can hit with the gopher browser itself but the gopher browser these days
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is now an extension of Firefox I believe and I haven't used it in a long long time yeah if there's a
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an update called bucktooth for Firefox it's also they have one for Firefox android and this other
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stuff but it's they have not been updated for a long time either it works flawlessly it works really
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well and it interpolates the gopher protocol beautifully it's flawless you don't even notice you
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wouldn't know you were on a gopher page unless you looked at the address but if I can just very
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briefly I've I've been gopher's cheerleader from the very start I think the gopher protocol is
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beautiful I love it love it I've never had a problem accessing it if I'm on something that can
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access gopher it just works beautifully I don't have to wait it pops up immediately I get the
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content not the appearance you know so that's my one thing I believe I still but as I've said to
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people gopher isn't dead it's only dreaming interesting enough Apache has has has a offers a
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little competition to go for because you can set up a download directory as you all both know
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and and Apache but there's actually some weird theming option I actually used it a few times
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where you get to the point where you can drop it in and it'll actually put the right icons for the
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right count the MP3 icon for MP3 files and do kind of go for pagey things within a download
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directory I don't know I might I might have to actually run Apache though for the next server
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because it's that thing you actually want to do no it isn't it absolutely isn't but but
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let's talk about email and and you'll see we'll see why this is this being considered for
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for version four is because I want private email I think I'm the only guy who ever used the
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co-op for as his primary email service I think so I only use it to talk to you essentially you
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and collect two or the only people I ever talked to on this email service but I do check it every
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single day and it's absolutely reliable every single time I go there it's there I did want to ask
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you something can I ask you about email this one thing sure long time ago on check Griffin's show
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he was talking about what a pain it was to set up and maintain especially maintain an email
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server and one of the things he talked about was a problem with spam right and trying to find a good
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spam some service to block spam and all this other stuff in all this time that we have had
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this email thing I have never once seen a piece of spam come through have you had a problem with
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that at all or is that something that's just either not an issue or it's gone away as a problem
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I do get spam we run spam assassin my wife and I train it and it does the job I gotta say I run
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I run an email server of my own now and yeah and it's I use post fix post fixes the bomb yeah yeah
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I mean it's the only one I had any experience with so it's what I went with but the spam issue has
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not really been a problem for me either so I don't know I felt like after I got over the initial hump
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of like how do I set up this thing I felt like in retrospect I really felt like people kind of
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oversold how quote unquote difficulty it was to run your own email server and now maybe they
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meant for other people like if you're running it for all your family and your friends or something but
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as as my exclusive user of my email server I'm I was a little bit surprised at how well it was
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actually going yeah actually I'm sorry I'm actually a little bit surprised to hear you say that
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because you did I think it was a series two or three episodes on your show about how a on the one
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hand how simple email ought to be and how on the other hand how complicated it really is in reality
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do you think it's time to revisit the idea of email as as a service that you could run yourself
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on your show yeah no I mean I remember the conversation that you are you are referencing and I think
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I was no I think I'm still I still feel that way I still feel like email is inherently a very complex
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process because you do have all these you can have an email server and then you can have a separate
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SMTP not yeah SMTP server and then you could have a you know you can just have and then you can
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do aliasing and then you can accept emails from certain places or none and it there are a lot
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of options and I don't feel like there's there is still no let's encrypt kind of setup thing for
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email do you know what I mean like yeah yeah before let's encrypt no one knew how to set up
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SSL even though honestly that wasn't actually that hard I I've done that before can I say encrypt is
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so simple yeah it is not so simple I have looked into it and I still need to encrypt my own stuff
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I still find it very challenging I don't know where it needs to be just yet okay interesting
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I find it very very simple but as I said I have I I have installed SSL prior to that at a job so I
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was kind of used to the the non let's encrypt so but I mean even so that's what I'm saying there
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is no simple way to run a script and then suddenly end up with a email server or a SSL thing
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you know whereas you have something like next cloud formerly own cloud you can have your own
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file sharing server and your own little private everything in next cloud and it is super simple
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you know it really is very simple it's like a WordPress install if you can install WordPress
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you can install next cloud and there's still nothing like that for email why do you think that is
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is it too complicated or no one thinks that there's a one-stop solution that's going to service a
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large portion of the audience yeah I think the idea of peer-to-peer and federated services and
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stuff just it hasn't taken hold yet and I feel like everyone's just like why do that if I have
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Gmail and you know why I have an own cloud if I can have a Facebook you know and it's just like
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everyone's just so brainwashed into thinking well there's this there's a one-stop shop for that
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so let's all go to that shop and who cares that's that's what I think yeah you have to have a
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bit of care I mean for me it was for me it was encryption and I've kind of finally I think I came
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to this conclusion earlier if you ever did clap to that PGP just isn't going to be usable by normal
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people you know I realized this it's just too hard for them to get and I realized that the only
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thing you could do is have your own email server and then tell your email server to put out and
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take in only an encrypted and then if the people who are your friends who are on your server with
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you you're secure and with people who are off your server you're as secure as you possibly can
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be with them and that kind of accepted that I mean in a way we're talking about an aspect of your
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life that's apart from the larger internet that is to say like this server although you've made the
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email your primary email deep geek this server is something that I feel like doesn't necessarily
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intersect with the rest of my life except in those areas where I've made it primary so in other
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words in your situation with email in my situation with those websites that I mentioned before you
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have to have faith in them you have to say this is going to be me this is my presence online and I
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have faith in this and you have to go forward with that it can't just be well as claps you say
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to campy sdf where you just you simply don't have faith in it you love it you like it you have
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fun with it but you simply can't put your faith in the thing no I mean that that's very important
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because essentially I don't have faith in in google that's where I don't want to use the Gmail
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server you know same goes for Yahoo you know and Verizon my current ISP because I have the fiber
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optic they decide not to have the old ISP traditional triumvirate of a web page host and a news host
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and a mail host and when they finally closed their mail service they offered us all free AOL
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accounts that were the Verizon yeah you can you can you can I'll let you have a guess us to my
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reaction Lawson Bronx I'll let you guess so I have I have a comment to Lawson Bronx and then a
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question to deep geek so Lawson Bronx when you said you had to have faith in in that platform
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I actually misunderstood you what you were saying and I thought you were saying more of like a
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philosophical thing like you have to have faith in your online presence being this sort of off-the-wall
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private server where you're going to build where you're going to actually spend energy to say yes
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this is my home garnet I'm going to plant flowers out in the front and I'm going to direct people
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to it and have company over and this is my home and I'm going to be proud of it whereas everyone
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else on the block is saying hey we live over at Facebook and I and I actually really like that
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and I think it's a valid point I think that if you choose to make a co-op or or you know to run
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your own service or whatever I do think you have to take ownership of it a little bit and say
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you know what I don't need that other thing because this is where I live this is where all my
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comfy stuff is this is where all my toys are and it's almost like you're investing in that server
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that you are running rather than sort of diversifying a whole bunch and going out and getting all
|
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the social account social media accounts and stuff I don't know if that's nonsense or not but
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I I don't know I feel like there's a certain amount of pride that you have to do you know this take
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ownership of that this is actually that exact point where your your principles and your philosophy
|
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crosses over into practicality in the real world you know this is that spot if you're going to
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make a statement like that if you're going to look at something like Facebook or Google or whatever
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you might have a problem with online because I still use my Gmail account I still have Gmail but
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deep geek doesn't because he has a problem with that and I don't have a you know a Facebook
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page because I have a problem with Facebook okay this is that spot though where you have to be
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able not only have faith in yourself yet to have faith in your bedrock yet to have faith in in
|
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this case this co-op this situation that we have constructed I have to be able and ultimately
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I have to say ultimately I have to have faith in deep geek you know that was that was day one if
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I if he you know deep geek was one of these guys that I didn't trust it never would have happened
|
|
to begin with you know yeah it never ever would have come about from the very start you have to have
|
|
faith if you're going to do a co-op if you're going to do it with other people you have to trust
|
|
those people you know I don't have to trust deep geek with my life although I would but I don't
|
|
have to I just have to trust him with my online presence well you know we used to call each other
|
|
roommates a lot like I remember that we would always refer to each other as a roommate essentially
|
|
yeah I still have the artwork of our little home on the internet that a lady friend of yours
|
|
did once and sent to us she drew a pen and pencil etching of a little house on the internet
|
|
very I still have that uh it's funny I don't remember that but cool did I ever see that I don't
|
|
remember it either I had my wife scan I know I sent it to both of you uh it's in my record somewhere
|
|
but that's that's the thing the fact that I can trust him means I can trust what he's done
|
|
and since I can trust what he's done I can trust myself through that platform when you get to that
|
|
stage then you can put your shingle out you can't say this is who I am this is what I'm doing
|
|
and I'm doing it through my own little instance my own little place on the internet you know again
|
|
it's almost nothing if there's almost nobody who's ever gonna go to my stuff and see what I do
|
|
but the people that go I have control of it it's my spot and in the end if I want to change the
|
|
website I can if I want to drop the website I can't if I want to do whatever I you know whatever
|
|
else within my very limited skill set I can do all of that that's an ability I have and I'm not
|
|
judging anybody else you know based on the choices they've made I've made some very practical
|
|
choices too you know and I still do and I and I I have reasons for it but I have to say that this
|
|
co-op has changed my life in the end what I'm choosing to do online that's an extension of myself
|
|
and it's an extension of my art and my art helps define me as a person and this co-op has allowed
|
|
me to do that in the way that I want to you know if it hadn't been for this I I almost certainly
|
|
would be on Facebook right now you know there's no doubt I would have gone where I thought that I
|
|
had to go because I wouldn't have known that there was an option I wouldn't have known anything else
|
|
people that listen to HPR they are a lot of them are capable of doing what we have done here
|
|
I think they should frankly I think they should consider doing it you know the the crazy thing is
|
|
and this isn't what I I still have this question for deep cake about something but but the first
|
|
thing I want to just kind of address is that the international exchange process has been dismal
|
|
for me and it's the reason I have not rejoined your co-op is because the process of getting money
|
|
out of New Zealand both the New Zealand dollars and just getting it you know somebody that
|
|
electronically transfer the thing has just been outrageously more difficult than I had expected
|
|
well I mean I'm getting a little tired of the monthly billing thing I need to find some way
|
|
of doing this on a quarterly basis you know frankly it's gotten so cheap now we could we could
|
|
drop it I could put the bill myself you know but I don't want to because it's like I feel like
|
|
you're not invested in it no you're not a true partnership if you don't it's more it's not
|
|
about needing the money as much of it's about needing the commitment uh frankly if you want to uh
|
|
send me jaws of that morning stuff you spread and toast and New Zealand I know it's just in the
|
|
water you know can I just say can I just say New Zealand honey is the finest honey on this planet
|
|
they're actually they're actually yeah you're right it actually is it's it's amazing it's really is
|
|
and it's it is one of the culinary secrets of the world but you could travel the world over and
|
|
not find honey as fine as they have in New Zealand just saying so I mean yeah there's options and
|
|
and frankly if you if you want to be the the the the the the the CTO for the web server I'll be glad
|
|
to trade you being the CTO for the email part you know that'd be great but I mean this wasn't meant
|
|
to be an overcho overcho to seduce you to rejoin us no it's not you report a year ago I did I
|
|
I approached you guys about rejoining and then it but it did it literally came down to the
|
|
exchange rate so I figured I should mention it just so that people who may be considering this
|
|
are aware that the money situation you know on a global scale is not what we all I think
|
|
think it is it's like it's it seems like it's super easy and like the internet has bridged every
|
|
gap but the the financial thing is still a real puzzle to navigate lost and I do this with bitcoin
|
|
and I'm just doing the bitcoins on my own computer and at one point I had a scare when I had
|
|
had a reinstall and I lost a a data set that had my bitcoins on it I got it back by rebuilding
|
|
tell tell them how you got it back this is this is a fabulous thing I actually had my bitcoin
|
|
addresses still intact but not the actual files and by by re downloading the blockchain I could
|
|
go forward from bitcoin transaction number one to the present and get everything back he sifted
|
|
he sifted the blockchain and got all of his money back yeah I was my jaw was on the floor when
|
|
I heard about that yeah so you know you know what this is deep geek this is why you have no time
|
|
for other stuff you do stuff like that anyway now I back up the blockchain too good point
|
|
good point valid point and this deep geek this is why we approached you from the very
|
|
exactly yeah okay so deep geek another logistical question about how how you maintained the the
|
|
co-op while I was there at least and I could be misremembering here but I feel like you were fairly
|
|
not strict because you gave us pseudo apt-get rights but you had a policy if I recall correctly
|
|
that you know we didn't install stuff that we didn't need basically yeah that was a policy
|
|
and and and indeed the you know my modern web serving is now vps based so the attempt to
|
|
to install software really nilly would be disastrous but we all had we all had the rights to do it
|
|
and I gave you instructions on how to do it in a way that could be backed out because there'd be
|
|
a good log file yeah I did it a couple of times in the past I actually I did a couple of things
|
|
and a couple of them might have seemed really nilly but I had a reason for them but yeah
|
|
that it worked just fine yeah and apt-get remove has really improved since the time I started
|
|
using apt-get it really is reliable at this point it's fantastic but yeah I mean I mean there's
|
|
just something you can do as a shell user with your shell located in other country that you can
|
|
like install a tool on and get it something and for a long time what one of the secrets to my
|
|
success with the newscast was that newscast producers in foreign countries who would not release to
|
|
America would release to Iceland and so I would download them in Iceland and you get the
|
|
information that way and transfer it encrypted that back to America where they didn't want to publish
|
|
for whatever reason deep geek if someone was considering this they have a small group of friends
|
|
that they are thinking about this sort of thing themselves give them a really good thing to
|
|
avoid something that you've learned uh something that I learned a really good thing to avoid a really
|
|
good thing to avoid is having no backups for the people you mean individual backups no I mean
|
|
backups for the people when I lock myself out you get me a new password lost all right when I
|
|
can't get through to an upstream provider you make the phone call oh yeah you see what I mean
|
|
yeah yeah in theory if I couldn't talk my way to getting an upstream guy to do something for me
|
|
maybe you'd be more persuasive of that individual and me so yeah I think this should be done in groups
|
|
I think that would be great I do think all HPR people should be doing not the Facebook thing
|
|
just at the at a minimum but I would say you know a couple of things to do and don't is don't have
|
|
don't try technical democracy have this is your domain this is my domain you want me to
|
|
commit like a bitch you don't I don't and trust that person do have something like a
|
|
C panel web host provider as part of it so people can easily go to a standard mass market style
|
|
service for certain projects if they don't want to be using fringe software to host what you
|
|
would call a mission critical system do encrypt the hell out of everything then there's room for
|
|
experimentation on paper the info underground co-op is a certificate signer if we're not
|
|
recognized by the web browsers but we do that we sign their own certificates with our own
|
|
certificate authority we experiment we had for a while we had a not not a bit towards service
|
|
what's the thing I'm thinking about the encrypted server the the docknet tour tour tour we had a
|
|
tour service yeah we had an underside version of the of the web pages for a while the experimentation
|
|
factor is fantastic yeah that's also I got to I got to say to people that that also can be the
|
|
part that can test your patience if you're not the person in charge of installing all this stuff
|
|
just saying yeah I did want to ask you one thing when we started we did not have mail that was not
|
|
part of it but you experimented with that would you consider the mail server to have been an experiment
|
|
that you feel succeeded and that graduated is to be part of the regular service yeah it was an
|
|
experiment I didn't know what to do and there was so there were many things to to consider because
|
|
the email is by intent design totally modular which is why you have a separate SMT to get back to
|
|
what clat 2 was saying I was separate SMTP server and a separate IMAP server and a separate mail
|
|
server it's not to make it more confusing it's so that you can fit the functions to your needs
|
|
so you know right now we're running dovcott for the IMAP post-fix for the email transfer
|
|
and post-fix for the SMTP server also you know and yeah it graduated and as I learned the situation
|
|
around us went while I'll never forget me and my niece with my first incarnation on Facebook
|
|
me and my niece quit Facebook one week before the Snowden revelation wow yeah and then you
|
|
after after my company went bankrupt I realized the reason you want to have a network of friends
|
|
is to get rehired so I went back on Facebook you know because that's for all the people I knew
|
|
were I'd like to hear your final thoughts about this is the guy who is really the one behind it
|
|
you know I'm the first to admit I'm a co-tail writer on this is the guy behind it what do you
|
|
feel you personally have gotten out of this and why would you encourage someone else what have I
|
|
gotten personally out of this I mean you meet above and beyond the fringe services I need well maybe
|
|
they they are the primary thing in which case that's what you might want to say no I'm you know
|
|
I'm a I'm a gracefully aging cyberpunk hippie I I got a sense of community out of this you know
|
|
my community is you guys in particular which is why we have a sub show in Hacker Public Radio
|
|
why we decided to continue information underground it within the the larger framework of Hacker Public
|
|
Radio and beyond that Hacker Public Radio is my community that I'm a member of this is my posse
|
|
that's what I get out of this it's an integral part of my geek lifestyle it's my claim and my
|
|
contribution to do this and for people that maybe don't have your skill set what do you sit
|
|
of them I say if you don't want to develop the skill set then get friends friends are great
|
|
and if you do want to get the skill set free software's the way to go you've been listening to
|
|
Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio dot org we are a community podcast network that
|
|
releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday today's show like all our shows was contributed
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if you have comments on today's show please email the host directly leave a comment on the website
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