Yea, if you use Tailscale with Funnel, you get a secure connection with no config required by the web user.
Onomatopoeia
Not seeing why you need WordPress.
The safest way I can see to make a secure connection across an untrusted network is to use a VPN of some sort, specifically a mesh network like Wireguard or Tailscale.
Tailscale has the advantage of being almost zero config, plus has the Serve and Funnel features which provide a mechanism to allow specific traffic into your Tailscale network.
Edit: Tailscale Serve is probably what I'd use.
How is being a heatpump (a reversible air conditioner) automatically more efficient?
If you have 2 units using identical design, but only add a reversing valve, I don't see how the heat pump version would be any more efficient at cooling.
Were you born in a barn!?
Password(s)
If not already using one, get a password manager like Bitwarden or KeePass (not LastPass).
Enable 2FA on all accounts where you can.
I keep a spreadsheet of accounts and their 2FA config (how the 2FA is setup, email, SMS, whatever, and which account it uses).
Why not?
Where I live it would be trivially easy.
Watch an Amazon driver pull into a development/complex, watch where he leaves packages and who doesn't come to the door immediately, then wait till he drives away and go collect.
So, "entertain me!" 🤦🏼
This is a major issue.
New users run the gamut of tech neophyte to very old hands. Both have reasons for not wanting to do this, even more, not knowing this can be done. As part of the "old hand" crowd, frankly I don't have the time to go look for this stuff - it really needs to be upfront when you join.
I think, overall, what you're talking about is the Discovery process for a new user. And with new users being new to lemmy, they don't understand how it all works. I've yet to sign up to a new instance and have anything clarified, up front - how lemmy works, and not just "federated like email", but how your stuff isn't replicated (I get this, but most people don't automatically get the implications of "federated, like email"). Also, what communities they federate, what they block, etc, again, in detail. This isn't done because documentation is hard, no one likes to do it - I'm as guilty of this as anyone.
Getting new servers to do this would be challenging, but just like the sidebar for a community, it's really crucial.
I think you're on to a good idea.
Me too. Really took me waaaaaay too long.
I think seven was answering the question
Wow, brilliant idea. Would take a while to learn to use.
Hahahahaha, damn Google.
"Help us prevent government from stopping us from being bad actors".