• danhakimi
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    -22 years ago

    yes, that’s my point, serdan is being silly, you’re right.

      • danhakimi
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        -22 years ago

        Many people tend to use their phones even when they’re not at home.

        • @Serdan@lemm.ee
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          22 years ago

          You don’t want the service to create arbitrary outbound connections, but you want your device to be able to communicate with the service.

          It’s been a while since I’ve done network stuff, but it sounds like a pretty simple textbook problem.

          • danhakimi
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            -22 years ago

            the technology my device uses to communicate with services, including self-hosted services, is known as the internet. local area networks only work in the local area, which frustrates the purpose of a mobile phone—being mobile, and all.

            both the server and the client must be connected to the internet to communicate with one another across significant distances.

            you’re right, this is a textbook problem.

            • @Serdan@lemm.ee
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              22 years ago

              You can block a service from establishing outbound connections while allowing it to respond to inbound connections. It’s pretty common to do this because server software generally has no business calling out unprompted.