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Cake day: February 10th, 2025

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  • Welcome Linux newbie :)

    There can be secrets in .config and so you need to be deliberate about what you commit while also ensuring that your .gitignore file is properly filled out to exclude the files which would have secrets that you don’t want to be portable. This requires a bit of work and you will, in the process, learn about how every single application that you use stores its config. You typically don’t want to just git add ., though this is a lazy/simple option and can be acceptable if you keep your files and backups secured.

    This kind of configuration will also encourage you to not just hit the ‘install plasma-apps metapackage’ button and be more deliberate about the software that you install as you will need to individually address the .config files for each application in your settings repo.

    I’d recommend against using Github. First, remember that “the cloud” is just “someone else’s computer”. Trusting anybody (esp. Microsoft) with critical data is a bad idea. So, sync to a location where you create your good, secure primary backups. The kind you put on a disk in a safe deposit box.

    This is undoubtedly more work than simply re-configuring everything when you fresh install. The payoff is that your system’s configuration will be portable and as consistent as possible across all environments and you can safely try new configurations with the trust that you can use git to revert any changes in case you don’t like them/it breaks something.

    If you want to do even more work you can maintain a separate set of dotfiles for your desktop machines and the machines where you only interact via terminal. Things like tmux config/plugins, bash/zshrc files, useful scripts and the contents of .local/bin (which is where your user’s executable scripts primarily reside) so you can ensure that your remote environments are consistent and equably capable.

    For more reading/search/youtubing on the topic, these kinds of repos are commonly referred to as ‘dotfiles’ or ‘dots’. You will often find people who customize applications that share their dots (more common in the ricing community). Some projects are essentially glorified dotfiles (NVChad for nvim, for example).

    Additionally, if you have more complicated setups that need to drop files into system directories or just in multiple unrelated directories, you can add GNU Stow which basically lets you store all of your dotfiles, binaries, system configurations, etc in a single directory (which you make a git repo) and you configure GNU Stow with the locations where these files need to live and it puts the files there, via symlink with a single command. Stow is an added level of complexity, likely more than most people need, but if you interact with a lot of new machines and need a quick way to configure them all in as much depth as possible… this is one of the ways you can do it.










  • because you don’t own the copyrights, so you can’t sue anyone for copyright infringement.

    You can’t sue for copyright infringement.

    You can, however, use content which is not able to be copyrighted and also still license (under contract law/EULAs) your product including terms prohibiting copying of the non-copyrightable information.

    This was settled in: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ProCD%2C_Inc._v._Zeidenberg

    On Zeidenberg’s copyright argument, the circuit court noted the 1991 Supreme Court precedent Feist Publications v. Rural Telephone Service, in which it was found that the information within a telephone directory (individual phone numbers) were facts that could not be copyrighted. For Zeidenberg’s argument, the circuit court assumed that a database collecting the contents of one or more telephone directories was equally a collection of facts that could not be copyrighted. Thus, Zeidenberg’s copyright argument was valid. However, this did not lead to a victory for Zeidenberg, because the circuit court held that copyright law does not preempt contract law. Since ProCD had made the investments in its business and its specific SelectPhone product, it could require customers to agree to its terms on how to use the product, including a prohibition on copying the information therein regardless of copyright protections

    You can’t copyright phone numbers, just like you can’t copyright generated code, but you can still create a license which protects your uncopyrightable content and it can be enforced via contract law.