

I also run both but don’t see how Immich could be a replacement for Nextcloud?


I also run both but don’t see how Immich could be a replacement for Nextcloud?


log in on a local IP and not the network name and it’s working again. but I’ll be moving to jellyfin from now
after seeing this edit on the top post I felt like OP was not not really looking for input and instead jumped ship when he had to change a single setting after an update in a software he had been using for years


I’m not gonna waste my time explaining how software might change over time, if you think you’ll never have to touch your Jellyfin server moving forward you’re sure to be disappointed


Or you could properly configure your server to recognise local ips


Huh, I thought that with the neoprene and cold water it would be hard enough to make it feasible on such vast areas


Because if it was that easy, they would have done it?
Exactly. Thats why I’m baffled. I would assume it to be rather easy, especially with the underwater drones they have used so far. They surely know more about the situation than we do, so maybe the bridge is actually under good surveillance nowadays


It’s a 18.1 km long bridge. You couldn’t possible watch it all and divers are basically invisible at night. Looking at how critical that bridge is usually portrayed, it would make sense to disable it (they have tried a few times already). What’s armchair about that?


I honestly find it baffling that that thing still stands. It shouldn’t be that hard to get a few divers there planting charges, right? Cut off the Krim from russia and see how long the soldiers their can still put up a fight


if your mail server blocks them they won’t show up there I think. It just refuses to accept the mail. Maybe check Nexxtcloud logs to see what happens when it tries to send the mail


do they not get sent or do you just not receive them (eg because your mail server blocks them as spam)?
Do both come from the same address?
Can you try to format the testmail the same way to see if they still arrive?


Still better to have a team to react to this incident than just have them shrug and ignore it for 5 years


No, the worst is that a company like Sony or their lawyers can find my server and create a list of movies I offer and then sue me over it. I live in a country where lawyers make a living doing nothing but that.
Besides that, security by obscurity is the worst possible form and barely qualifies as security at all. It’s also another place where the Jellyfin devs leave their users to their own devices when it comes to securing the server against malicious actors.
And none of this is clearly communicated by the project. The unauthenticated endpoints are not disclosed, the issues with the filepath is not disclosed. Jellyfin fans treat it as a drop in replacement for Plex, but people using it as such basically throw an unauthenticated server onto the open web


That’s simply not true. You can just set your local ip range as unauthenticated and use it to your hearts content without an internet connection.


You can access it through your local network without authentication. Add a vpn and you got the same setup Jellyfin fans will praise


Plex has a whole team dedicated to security. It’s obviously not perfect and it is a larger attack surface than Jellyfin, but I’ll take that any day over devs who treat security as an afterthought


Again, its not random. It’s not a UUID. Its an md5 hash of the filepath. Which is easily guessable since most people have a very similar if not identical folder structure, especially since a lot have it managed by the *arr suite. take that plus the publicly available release names for movies and you’re done


The general jist is, do not expose Jellyfin to the internet. Neither via a port nor through a reverse proxy. Its simply not build secure enough for that.
Use docker to make the setup easier, then use tailscale or whatever VPN solution to allow users from outside your network to access it.
All of the additional authentication solutions mentioned break client compatibility. Then you could only watch through a browser.
Install docker, deploy Jellyfin to it, test it. They both have good guides on their respective websites.


That doesn’t solve the glaring security issues Jellyfin has. It just changes the computer through which they are accessed


Yeah and that kills Jellyfin as a drop in replacement for Plex. I would’ve deployed it years ago with a subdomain and given it to friends if it was as easily shareable as Plex
I would definitely recommend Immich then. I use it together with my wife and we both upload our photos automatically and create albums together. There’re also companion projects, that make sharing albums outside your household easier and safer.