All responses are saying "it is illegal". But is it more illegal than pirating a movie for yourself only? Would it still be illegal if you would have paid for the movie? In that case it seems like lending the dvd to a friend...
verstra
The answer depends on technical ability of your partner. In any case, they should always be able to login and extract all the data they need, so they can then reinstall, say plain Debian.
This could also be done with help from a Linux versed relative/friend. So you should leave a bit of documentation behind.
Other than that, don't optimise for the worse case scenario. It will leave you with suboptimal system most of the time.
Is this a threat? 🤔
Can you expand on this wild claim? The whole point of containers is isolation so what you are saying is that containers fail at that all the time?
That's cool, post a link here when you're done, I want to see what you cook up.
Good, we have been in a drought of js frameworks lately: https://dayssincelastjsframework.com/
Joking aside, that's your selling feature?
You've beaten Years. But have you? Hello vsouce, Michael here!
The whole of july of 2024?
Is it in a basement? Is there a lot of arches?
Shit man, that's lots of lillies. Don't become that dude from the mule.
There are two slovenias, top left. Which is better?
Giving them access to Jellyfin is not fully "copying" a movie, it is just access to streaming (they can download, but that's on them).
Overall, this makes little sense anymore and I feel that limiting data sharing is hard to conceptualize, let alone prevent with regulation.