Now, I never used it. (Something about untrusted people storing encrypted data--potentially illegal content--on your hard drive and never knowing for sure that some three-letter agency hasn't found a way to decrypt it and place the blame on you.)
And at the same time, it is still similar to what it appeared to be. keys are hashes of the encrypted stored data. There's going to be some sort of overlay that maps keyspace onto IP (v4? v6?) addresses. So at some level, it superficially resembles #IPFS, modulo the use of web-based protocols by client programs.
I should probably see whether I can find an unused "Zero" device ( Raspberry Pi #RasPi Zero, Orange Pi Zero, Banana Pi Zero, or similar ) with an external storage drive and spin up a node to explore Freenet.
Hopefully, I won't stumble onto bomb-making plans or snuff porn.
Now back to the video and then back to my training programs.
@kevie One of your earliest #RasPi episodes was about setting up an open file share on the local network with Samba. I used that to allow my mom to access her files from multiple computers.
I will add this #HPR episode to my listening queue.
I have a !RasPi Zero that I bought together with a board that's supposed to give serial-over-USB access (and I think also give the #RasPi NAT'd network access through your laptop). That board broke during travel, so I may repurpose the SBC once I find it again.
Anyway, I do have a currently unused #RasPi 0 W starter kit here, but I just went ahead and ordered one, so she'd get something still sealed in its box.
@geniusmusing It sounds like a firmware upgrade redirects IP address access to router.asus.com. I have always used IP addresses directly for any in-network access. Apparently, #Asus did not consider how this requirement plus #HSTS would interact.
My entire network is offline right now (other than some phone hotspotting during this extended move), but I now intend to do all my network config from a #RasPi that is only used for in-network management tasks.