I think your best bet in this case is google drive. Most people have a google account, and if they don't, I believe it's possible to set it up in a way that it will let them upload anyway. I don't think you're getting out of the account requirement, outside of you setting up an anonymous ftp server in a vps or something.
mrwiggles
This is the result of the death of isps as net-neutral carriers.
OPNsense for the win! It's so powerful, I love it.
Except, what it produces is very similar or identical to some copyrighted works, licensed under the LGPL, like in this case. You don't have to copy a whole program to plagiarize someone
I think this largely boils down to the time scales required. A person copying your work has a minimum amount of time it takes them to do that, even when it's just copy and paste. An LLM can copy thousands of different developer's code, for instance, and completely launder the license. That's not ok. Why would we allow machines to commit fraud when we don't allow people to?
💩 -gle making piles people can step in
Lemmy by default will federate with all instances if you don't put instances in the "Allowed Instances" section. I've found, it's easier to federatte with all instances and ban the ones you don't want. Otherwise, you effectively use a whitelist to federate.
So, from what I understand, the login cookie is considered "Strictly necessary" as it is involved with the necessary functions of the site. As far as privacy policy and cookie explanations, lemmy has none, and I've been campaigning in Github to get the necessary changes made to make the Lemmy UI compliant, which to my understanding it is not currently. This has nothing to do with cookie banners and everything to do with privacy policy.
As a note, the cookie notices are required by EU law for any tracking of the user via cookies. I just went into this with my lemmy instance. Lemmy isn't required to have a cookie notice because it doesn't track you with cookies.
Well this is disturbing.
I also use Jeroba, as it's in the FDroid repos. I'll look into those others you mentioned, but I'm quite happy with Jeroba so far.
And this is why you password protect your ssh keys