Interesting, thanks for the info
Interesting, thanks for the info
That makes sense, I’ll have to check the path. Thanks for lending your thoughts on this
Yeah everything (server, Linux clients, Android clients, other clients) is on the same WiFi network which is why this is extra frustrating since Linux just works like usual
No tcpdump isn’t seeing the request… Thanks for the suggestion
Your comments were good and kind. Debugging even obvious things is good since computer science is literal magic electrified rocks and keeping every step in our heads is impossible
Yeah don’t worry about the downvotes
Hmm not seeing it on GrapheneOS
Yeah same netmask of 255.255.255.0
ERR_NETWORK_ACCESS_DENIED
But if I can see the server on the same WiFi network from any Linux machine wouldn’t that ensure all those steps are OK?
Is there a setting for this? Yeah, I assume it’s some default setting I missed
(I’m seeing this issue on any Android distro, I’ve tried a few)
nmap -Pn 192.168.1.2
At least it shows the server is up from the client’s perspective (other clients can actively see the same IP and server on port)
Same WiFi subnet
No mobile network
Thank you
Any good debugging tools for android here or should I just rely on Linux networking tools through installed shells? Is there an industry standard for Android as a client?
Massive amounts. In the US, see Texas and how their energy grid has been under massive strain since new data centers are popping up there. It also uses a massive amount of water and natural resources. Global this happens, it’s one of the more obvious ways of direct impact our resources and energy
For an example: Watching a DVD locally has an immediate energy use, and that use is monitored and then sold to data brokers by the energy companies (at least in the US). Pretty much end of story.
Now the same movie being watched on a big streaming service, they use AI to process and suggest the movie, catalog and analyze every other user data to build their algorithm and AI better, and then usually sell that data to data brokers who then sell to other data brokers… Not to mention the servers needed to route the traffic to the correct computers and all of the computers in between. And that’s just considering a private use of a streaming service directly without a smartTV and an ISP that isn’t also selling their browsing habits…
Which all require energy, water and precious metals, few if any are “green” or cleanly extracted
Being private actually helps with global warming, AI and human rights because it gives the beast less to feed on. Less data or “good data” means fewer computers processing data and wasting energy.
Keep it up, you’ll find yourself in more interesting circles than the mindless consumers
::edit:: On your comment of the end of civilization, yeah, being private might save your life or others. Historically data collection and processing makes it easier for bad people to hunt down other people.
Not saying this will happen, and I don’t believe it will, but if you’re worried about some scary future, then keeping yourself private might be beneficial
100%, it’s gambling at a rigged casino. Silly money pushing silly money from pleebs, index funds might have worked for the early boomers but not since the early 00s
What an interesting website name
Yeah, hosting it on Tor or i2p will be beneficial for those clients who don’t want to browse the clearnet. I think most all sites should have both