[PrivSec.dev](https://privsec.dev) is a website made by me and a couple of friends. The goal is to provide practical privacy and security advice for the end user. You can think of it as a shared blog focusing on this topic.
We focus on in-depth system configuration, security analysis, and software/hardware recommendations. Our site is based on technical merits, not ideologies and politics.
[ArcticFoxes.net](https://arcticfoxes.net) is a group of self hosted and federated services run by me. It consists of:
- [A Matrix server](https://matrix.arcticfoxes.net) using my [hardened docker image](https://github.com/tommytran732/Synapse-Docker). I also have a [web client](https://element.arcticfoxes.net) and TURN server as accessories for the Matrix server.
- [A OpenVPN to ONC converter](onc.arcticfoxes.net). This is a simple fork of [thomkeh/ovpn2onc](https://github.com/thomkeh/ovpn2onc) with a dark theme.
These are setup [scripts I run on my Linux systems](https://github.com/TommyTran732/Linux-Setup-Scripts), and serve as the basis for my other setups. You can adapt them to deploy yours.
These are sample [Butane/Ingition configuration files](https://github.com/tommytran732/Fedora-CoreOS-Ignition) that you can adapt to quickly deploy a Fedora CoreOS server with the containers of your choice. They share the same hardening as the Linux Setup Scripts.
The [Arch Setup Script](https://github.com/TommyTran732/Arch-Setup-Script) is a script that I wrote to automate my Arch Linux installation which mimics openSUSE's setup with BTRFS and Snapper. At the time, there was no other installer that does this nicely because they all use the same flat layout as recommended in the Arch Wiki. The downside of using this layout is that snapper rollback does not work properly and the user has to get into the Arch ISO to manually rollback their system. This could be solved by using the openSUSE's layout for BTRFS, and I forked Easy Arch to do just that.