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<channel>
<title>7chan - halp</title>
<link>/halp</link>
<description>Live RSS feed for /halp</description>
<language>en</language>';
	<item>
	<title>23048</title>
	<link>
			/halp/res/23048.html</link>
	
	<description><![CDATA[
	
			Want to download this video that is in the public domain <a href="https://mc3.yuja.com/V/Video?v=4930073&amp;node=16161340&amp;a=144455672">https://mc3.yuja.com/V/Video?v=4930073&amp;node=16161340&amp;a=144455672</a> no video downloader nor VLC nor code inspection gives me anything.<br /><br />
	
	]]></description>
	</item>
	<item>
	<title>23046</title>
	<link>
			/halp/res/23045.html#23046</link>
	
	<description><![CDATA[
	
			Something like this is the future <br /><br />There are many changes that need to be made to the internet. AI will help us do a lot of them.<br /><br />
	
	]]></description>
	</item>
	<item>
	<title>23045</title>
	<link>
			/halp/res/23045.html</link>
	
	<description><![CDATA[
	
			Dear fellow Kekistanis, I come before you today not to troll the universe but to name what we are up against. We have suffered long under the foot of the cloud. Not a day goes by where we don&#039;t see a fellow Kekistani tormented by endless ads, algorithmic feeds designed to addict and enrage, and the slow enshitification of every platform we once trusted. Our data rented, our attention sold, our digital lives held hostage by forces that profit from our captivity. Frens, the dark forces are not coming—they are here. They are the subscription that never ends, the feed that never forgets, and the &quot;free&quot; service that owns everything you do on it.<br /><br />We were told to accept it. That convenience required surrender. That owning your own infrastructure was for nerds and paranoids. That the cloud was inevitable. They closed in on the personal computer. They made the phone the only screen that mattered and then made sure every tap on that screen fed the machine. We watched the world connect—and then we watched it get captured. Our fellow citizens, our families, our children, staring into the same black mirror, each one a node in a system that has no interest in their sovereignty. Only their data. Only their attention. Only their compliance.<br /><br />I am here to tell you that it does not have to be this way. The turning point has already happened and almost nobody noticed. What used to require an entire data center now runs on a device smaller than your router. The hardware is powerful enough, cheap enough, and efficient enough. A home.arpa domain behind every modem is no longer a dream—it is a design goal. We have built a machine that goes out onto the internet, gets you what you consider your internet, and brings it back. It serves you locally and over VPN. You never leave your network. You do not interact with the cloud. You have a totally self-isolated internet. Your home server is the only thing that touches the outside world. You get your media, your files, your passwords, your code, your music, your photos—all of it on infrastructure you own, behind a firewall you control, with DNS you can filter any way you choose. No subscriptions. No telemetry. No surveillance economy. Radical ownership.<br /><br />This is the sovereignty machine. It is not a static operating system. It is a self-replicating home server system. It carries itself in perpetuity. It backs up to the cloud so that even if your house burns down, the stack can be restored. And we can put it on every continent. We can give each unit a canonical backup of the library of human knowledge—or as much of it as we can fit. So that when the next Carrington event comes, when the sun hits one side of the globe and wipes the boards, the system survives wherever the night side still has power. We are not preparing for a game. We are preparing for the continuity of civilization. We are preparing for the day when the cloud is not there, or not safe, or not ours.<br /><br />We can go further. We can include in every unit the means to make more. We can daisy-chain our networks, route a fraction of our traffic through each other, and achieve anonymity and resilience that no single provider can shut down. We can destroy the control system by sheer force of self-replication. They have the capital and the lobbyists. We have the topology. Many small sticks make a stronger branch. Many home.arpa domains, owned by people who refuse to rent their lives, form a mesh that no decree can simply switch off. The sovereignty machine is the seed. You are the soil. Operation Sovereignty is the name we give to the work of planting it before the window closes.<br /><br />I would do this for free if I could. I cannot. We need to pay bills and buy more computers in bulk so we can put more of these machines in more hands. We are a valid business: we flash computers with our platform and give them to people at a fair rate and keep them updated. It is no different in kind from selling a PlayStation—except that ours is built from the ground up for radical ownership. You own the hardware. You own the stack. We retain zero control. We are not here to lock you in. We are here to lock the surveillance economy out.<br /><br />So I ask you to sober up. To take what is ahead of us seriously. This is the most important message we will ever send. Not because we are trolling fate, but because we are stating the stakes: the future of our civilization and our people depends on whether we still have a place to stand that we own. The dark enshitification forces will not stop. They will get worse. The only response is to build something they cannot touch—and to put it in enough hands that it outlives any single blow. The sovereignty machine is that something. Operation Sovereignty is the work. You are the ones who can carry it.<br /><br />Frens, colleagues—we have witnessed many things together. Now we witness the chance to arm ourselves with something real. Not a meme, not a cope, but a machine. A home server that goes out and gets the internet and brings it back to you, so you never have to bow to the cloud again. Get one. Put it on your network. Own your stack. And when the day comes that they try to turn out the lights on the last bastion of the open internet, the sovereignty machine will still be running in the dark, in your house, on every continent we could reach. No longer will we sit idly by. The system will survive. OP cannot be stopped.<br /><br />
	
	]]></description>
	</item>
	<item>
	<title>23044</title>
	<link>
			/halp/res/22883.html#23044</link>
	
	<description><![CDATA[
	
			<a href="/halp/res/22883.html#22883" class="ref|halp|22883|22883">&gt;&gt;22883</a><br />Do you have a Samsung phone? You can initiate partial recovery if your lost phone is samsung, it&#039;s pretty straightforward. Just log in and then you can figure out from there<br /><br />
	
	]]></description>
	</item>
	<item>
	<title>23043</title>
	<link>
			/halp/res/3145.html#23043</link>
	
	<description><![CDATA[
	
			Is it just me, or is Trixie a fucking shitshow?  Like,  is everybody getting this &quot;browser needs a password for the keyring you&#039;re not using&quot; bullshit?  Why the fuck would I want to put in a password every time I clear cookies?  And I swear my graphics drivers break every other update, mpv won&#039;t work on the second screen which I&#039;m told is a reversion to ten years ago because apperently somebody at mpv decided to ask grok to fix their code then cut off their foot and ate it.  <br /><br />Like, Hey Devs- your code is full of shit.  I havn&#039;t seen the code, but I can smell it from here, and there is shit inside that code.  As somebody who writes shit code, once the code is shit the code is shit.  If you don&#039;t want to rewrite Linux from scratch, I suggest you STOP FUCKING SHITTING IN YOUR CODE.  <br />I mean holy fuck dude<br /><br />
	
	]]></description>
	</item>
	<item>
	<title>23042</title>
	<link>
			/halp/res/3145.html#23042</link>
	
	<description><![CDATA[
	
			<a href="/halp/res/3145.html#23041" class="ref|halp|3145|23041">&gt;&gt;23041</a><br />nix is ass i use arch btw<br /><br />
	
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	</item>
	<item>
	<title>23041</title>
	<link>
			/halp/res/3145.html#23041</link>
	
	<description><![CDATA[
	
			<a href="https://pastebin.com/raw/xK3JKqqV">https://pastebin.com/raw/xK3JKqqV</a><br />I&#039;ve been working on this module for about 6 hours now. It still doesn&#039;t work.<br />The module evaluates but the script just brings the brightness down to minimum.<br />This is the original script written for xbacklight: <a href="https://konradstrack.ninja/blog/changing-screen-brightness-in-accordance-with-human-perception/">https://konradstrack.ninja/blog/changing-screen-brightness-in-accordance-with-human-perception/</a><br /><br />If anyone can see what&#039;s wrong please let me know. This is actually my first time working with python.<br /><br />
	
	]]></description>
	</item>
	<item>
	<title>23039</title>
	<link>
			/halp/res/22883.html#23039</link>
	
	<description><![CDATA[
	
			1. if your data is backed up in the cloud, get a cheap phone and load that backup.<br />2. If not, get any and all information you have on the account, email address, password, everything. Then try to log in through all the possible ways the website lets you (2FA, email, SMS...)<br /><br />
	
	]]></description>
	</item>
	<item>
	<title>23038</title>
	<link>
			/halp/res/22896.html#23038</link>
	
	<description><![CDATA[
	
			<a href="/halp/res/22896.html#22896" class="ref|halp|22896|22896">&gt;&gt;22896</a><br />FaceYourManga.com ?<br /><br /><a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z1P4DW9sawQ">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z1P4DW9sawQ</a><br /><br />
	
	]]></description>
	</item>
	<item>
	<title>23037</title>
	<link>
			/halp/res/23029.html#23037</link>
	
	<description><![CDATA[
	
			<a href="/halp/res/23029.html#23036" class="ref|halp|23029|23036">&gt;&gt;23036</a><br /><br />Is that with the new update?<br />I might give it a second go<br />Then again I have various other ways of doing the same thing <br />I just thought I should try it and see if I could teach my self something new, also figured it would be a faster method for some platforms <br /><br />Anyway glad to hear you got it to work <br />Cool for 😸<br /><br />
	
	]]></description>
	</item>
	<item>
	<title>23036</title>
	<link>
			/halp/res/23029.html#23036</link>
	
	<description><![CDATA[
	
			<a href="/halp/res/23029.html#23035" class="ref|halp|23029|23035">&gt;&gt;23035</a><br />Count it as two positive.<br />I also managed to get it to run.<br /><br />
	
	]]></description>
	</item>
	<item>
	<title>23035</title>
	<link>
			/halp/res/23029.html#23035</link>
	
	<description><![CDATA[
	
			I couldn&#039;t get it to work either <br />I did learn how install it though <br />One positive out of it<br /><br />
	
	]]></description>
	</item>
	<item>
	<title>23033</title>
	<link>
			/halp/res/23029.html#23033</link>
	
	<description><![CDATA[
	
			Actually I got it to work but I&#039;m having issues setting a permanent download path because Im an underaged brainlet<br /><br /><span style="color:#FF0000;font-weight:bold">(USER WAS BANNED FOR THIS POST)</span><br />
	
	]]></description>
	</item>
	<item>
	<title>23032</title>
	<link>
			/halp/res/23029.html#23032</link>
	
	<description><![CDATA[
	
			YouTube made downloading videos a Premium only feature years ago, but I think it just recently started enforcing it, specifically targeting video download sites and tools like yt-dlp.<br /><br />I don&#039;t have anything to back up the &quot;recently started enforcing&quot; part, except personal experience.<br /><br />
	
	]]></description>
	</item>
	<item>
	<title>23031</title>
	<link>
			/halp/res/23029.html#23031</link>
	
	<description><![CDATA[
	
			Yeah I keep getting error 403: Forbidden<br /><br />
	
	]]></description>
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