- ChatGPT -> llama.cpp
- Dropbox -> Syncthing + ZFS
- PayPal -> Atto
- Google Home -> Home Assistant
- Google Docs/Sheets -> Collabora Office
Some of these require self-hosting, so you might need Headscale or WireGuard to connect to them
Some of these require self-hosting, so you might need Headscale or WireGuard to connect to them


What are the vulnerabilities that you’re afraid of? Can you answer this purely from the info OP gave, i.e. without making assumptions about what the server authorizes the phone to do? OP’s post does not indicate that they’re violating the principle of least privilege in any way.


Scheduled snapshots (btrfs or zfs). If the compromised account deletes or modifies files, they’re still there in the past snapshots
Filesystem-level snapshots are quite space-efficient because they don’t make copies of all the files or even whole files; just the blocks that changed.
Not sure why you included “on the phone” in that list?


My guess the issue is that phones don’t just show up as simple drives, they rely on MTP support


Gentoo Linux user here. Sometimes when I open my laptop’s lid, the hard drive disconnects


Was this survey taken among alive people? If so, it might be subject to survivorship bias. Left-handed people might die earlier on average.


Like I said, no one’s wasting a 0-day on a lemming like you or me


That’s like encoding malware in a picture and calling it dangerous


Torrents aren’t risky for movies as long as you don’t have “Hide file extensions” turned on. Unless someone’s wasting their zero-day video player exploit on you, which is unlikely, you wont find malware in an mp4 or mkv unless it’s actually an exe in disguise
GitLab, Gitea and Codeberg
See the first video in the screenshot