Someone turned a $10 ESP32 into a public-facing web server because apparently having a rack of enterprise Dell servers wasn't quite enough of a homelab flex. The little microcontroller that could ran for 500 days before literally burning out from the pressure of being the world's most overachieving IoT device. Now it's back from the dead, presumably with better life insurance.
r/selfhosted
A masochistic soul spent three months rediscovering that self-hosting is like riding a bicycle—if bicycles constantly broke down, required security patches, and made you question your life choices. After 15-20 years of this digital self-flagellation, they're scaling back to relay systems, which is the tech equivalent of admitting you'd rather use training wheels than keep crashing into traffic. The future of amateur self-hosting appears to be professionally admitting defeat.
r/selfhosted
Someone's TerraMaster NAS got so thoroughly pwned that ransomware was literally camping out in the shared folder permissions like a digital squatter waiting for the right moment to strike. The attack exploited a command injection vulnerability so obvious it's basically the security equivalent of leaving your front door wide open with a neon 'Rob Me' sign. Pro tip: when your NAS starts growing mysterious usernames like digital tumors, it's time for emergency surgery.
r/selfhosted