<drumroll…>Tada!..
It suddenly is working. I didn’t change a thing.
@catloaf@lemm.ee suggested I get suspicious about my country or ISP. Should I worry, now?!.. :-(
Seriously, did the f-droid folks change anything on their end?
<drumroll…>Tada!..
It suddenly is working. I didn’t change a thing.
@catloaf@lemm.ee suggested I get suspicious about my country or ISP. Should I worry, now?!.. :-(
Seriously, did the f-droid folks change anything on their end?
I tried to use some webproxy to test other locations and had the same result - only difference is the name offered for the file to download.
Thanks.
It happen in both http and https, but http wold redirect to https wouldn’t it?
The cert is letsencrypt, yes. Didn’t verify the details, though.
Ahha! With a blank bowser profile directory it works as expected. It has to be HSTS, right? Now, how do I fix this?
Bang! Firefox on windows - same thing!
Both hosts and resolv.conf are ok.
Well… just saved one of those files, renamed it to file.html and opened it with the browser. Seems to be the f-droid homepage lacking the css.
What could it be? That doesn’t happen on any other website.
Does your ISP or government interfere with your Internet access? When you view the cert, does it show that it was issued by Let’s Encrypt?
I hope not.
I can’t inspect any cert. The browser url bar doesn’t show the padlock.
On my desktop, the name is something like <random>.ptrom. Im from Portugal. Could ptrom have anything to do with it?
Forgoy to say: firefox, chromium, epiphany on debian with gnome
The content seems html but the name is something else. On android the suggested filename is downloadfile.bin. creepy.
No no no. The app seems to work ok. It’s the website that seems broken.
I cant. I’m on my phone right now. Just picture a save file dialog from 3 browsers with a random string dot something as filename. I noticed on my phone the file is named something like downloads.bin.
Sadly, not in Debian testing. Not in main, at least.
Actually, I would place the “Subscribed” button as another layer, or remove it completely since it might only make sense to filter subscribed communities… (does it?)
Also I would add a “New filter” option to the menu.
I understand this change would need a great deal of work to be implemented since to create a filter one would have to have access to several filtering options: add one or several communities to search in, add keywords (or hashtags - but, please, see @mark@programming.dev’s answer) to include, maybe certain users…
Would it be realistic to implement some kind of language like: “keyword -unwanted AND (keyword OR keyword) AND community:!comunity@instance AND user:@user@instance …”?
Well… I thought of listing all posts related to technology (for example) grouping Linux, free software, open source… there are many communities dedicated to each of those. It would be useful to group them together for quick access.
Maybe bookmarking the post and remembering to get back there later as a workaround?..