Skip Navigation

You're viewing a single thread.

257 comments
  • A proxied front end which works 10/10 , FOSS online and selfhostable, online with encryted server (SHA-384), very fast and lighweight, even more in Light Mode for PC with few resources. The best front end i've seen, nice UI without ads or other crap.

    https://poketube.fun/app

    • What the hell is an encrypted server? What's special about SHA-384, where do they use it to improve privacy? Please don't bullshit people with random IT terms.

      Glancing at the code, this is just another YT proxy. Ofc they have your user info, they just choose to only store aggregated data.

      • Do you have anything better to contribute to solve the YT problem than what I have contributed in this thread?

        Our servers are secured with SHA-384 Signature Algorithm; meaning we cant see the videos you watching, things you search, or things you do We migth use third party services on PokeTube, but third party request on PokeTube is proxied by default. no third party can see wat the hell ru doing on PokeTube. We do this by proxying the requests via a whole diffrent server, so no third party can see you.

        Source code https://codeberg.org/ashley/poketube/

        https://poketube.fun/privacy

        • Do you have anything better to contribute to solve the YT problem than what I have contributed in this thread?

          Apparently pointing out false or at least misleading claims, instead of making them.

          Our servers are secured with SHA-384 Signature Algorithm

          This is a meaningless sentence.

          meaning we cant see the videos you watching, things you search

          This is just not true. Go to a video on their site, the browser requests the video id as cleartext from their server. Search for something, your browser sends the search term as cleartext as well. There is nothing encrypted beyond the standard, it's all visible to them.

          This is how all YT proxy sites do it, but they don't claim to use some sort of special encryption. It's widely accepted that you have to put some amount of trust into whoever is hosting the instance you are using, because they can see the things you watch and search for.

    • Is this something that surfaced only recently? Can't believe I haven't come across it already, if it's as good as you make it seem

      • Yes, it's pretty new. Seen in New Apps in AlternativeTo.

You've viewed 257 comments.