Felix Lechner <felix.lech...@lease-up.com> writes: > Hi Zacchaeus, > > On Thu, Jan 30 2025, Ricardo Wurmus wrote: > >> the Guix project is not operating the GNU list servers > > The Guix project could operate an authenticated mail relay for members > like Debian does, but I do not recommend it. > > Kind regards > Felix
Ricardo makes a good point. I should probably send this specific complaint to a different gnu.org email (and I will, later). I suppose I'd be fine using a Guix relay to contribute to Guix, but I can't help set that up because, again, anything I set up would be from residential addresses that are ineligable for rDNS. As for what I wanted from guix-devel, I was wondering how I might submit my most recent patch (adds full Syncthing configuration support) to Guix. Based on this conversation, I'm just going to expose my fork of Guix on my website, continue rebasing on master, stick to the irc, and hope someone with commit access applies my contributions... My current long-term project is a Guix-powered box that replaces someone's router and operates as backups, web-hosting, automatic DNS updates, and email for you and your friends, such that two boxes can act as full backup relays for eachother. Think FreedomBox+DDNS+friends(+a few other details). Hence, I am opposed to rDNS and banning residential IP's on principle. Thanks again for the responses! -Zacchae PS. I know this maybe isn't the place to complain, but I'm still in shock. Brennan's email earlier was neither TLS encrypted nor DKIM signed, and came from an Amazon IP, but my email with TLS, SPF, DKIM, and DMARC get's rejected because my IP address is "residential"? GNU's not supposed to hate humans. I shouldn't need to pay some host to be an equal member on the internet. I get that spam is a valid concern, and I'm willing to jump through some hoops to prove personhood, but that shouldn't involve giving up any digital autonomy.