7.1 KiB
Parasitter
Twitter and Youtube via RSS with privacy
Parasitter allows you to follow your favorite Twitter and YouTube accounts with full privacy. Parasitter uses Nitter's and Invidious rss feeds in order to gather the latest content from your favourite accounts and builds a beautiful feed so you can read them. We will never connect you to Twitter or YouTube in any way, so your privacy is safe when using Parasitter. Parasitter is written in Python and Flask and uses Semantic-UI as its CSS framework.
Parasitter doesn't try to compete with Nitter nor Invidious. It serves as a complement, as it beneficiates from them. Parasitter is not a Twitter viewer as Nitter is or a YouTube frontend as Invidious. Instead Parasitter gathers all your accounts in one place so you can stay tuned with their latest content.
Parasitter is possible thanks to several open-source projects that are listed on the Powered by section. Make sure to check out those awesome projects!
Index:
Features:
- No JavaScript.
- 0 connections to Twitter or Youtube.
- Uses RSS feeds (could be expanded to more social networks)
- Follow Twitter accounts.
- Follow Youtube accounts.
- Save your favourite Tweets.
- Save your favourite Youtube videos [Coming soon!]
- Tor-friendly.
- Terminal-friendly.
- Easy 1 minute self-hosting deploy.
- No need for domain, runs locally.
And many more to come!
Security
Only the hash of your password is stored on the database. Also no personal information of any kind is kept on the app itself, if a hacker gets access to it only thing they could do would be to follow/unfollow some accounts.
I always recommend self-hosting, as you will be the only person with access to the data.
Privacy
Parasitter cares about your privacy, and for this it will never make any connection to Twitter or Youtube. We make use pf rss feeds to fetch all the tweets from your followed accounts. If you want to use a specific Nitter or Invidious instance you can replace it on the file app/routes.py
.
It is always recommended to set up a self-hosted instance. It is quite easy and conveninent and will give you full control over your data. The only data that is stored on the Database is:
- Hash of the password
- Username
- Email (we won't send you any mails so you can make up the mail) - This is for future versions.
- List of followed users
- List of saved posts
Self hosting
Local
You don't need a server to run Parasitter. You can run it on your computer locally and own your (little) data. The installation process is done on a GNU/Linux environment, but should be pretty similar on other platforms.
-
Install
python3
,pip3
,python3-venv
(optional) andgit
. -
Clone this repository:
git clone https://github.com/pluja/Parasitter.git
-
Navigate to the project folder:
cd Parasitter
-
[Optional] Prepare a virtual environment and activate it:
Python lets you create virtual environments. This allows you to avoid installing all the
pip
packages on your system.
If you don't mind about that, you can jump to step 5. and ignore everything about "[env]".python3 -m venv venv
source venv/bin/activate
Now you are inside of the virtual environment for python. All instructions wiht [env] indicate that must be done inside the env if you decided to create one. From now on, you will always need to start the application from within the virtual env.
-
[env] Update pip
pip3 install --upgrade pip
-
[env] Install the required libraries:
pip3 install -r requirements.txt
Use
sudo
or, preferably--user
, if not working.
-
[env] Initialize and prepare the database.
flask db init
flask db migrate
flask db upgrade
-
[env] Run the application.
flask run
-
Go to "http://localhost:5000/" and enjoy.
Updating to new versions:
NOTE: Updating will never delete your database, your following list will not be erased.
-
Navigate to the git repository (the one you cloned when installing).
-
Pull new changes:
git pull
-
Install new packages (if any):
pip install -r requirements.txt
It may be that there are no new packages to install. In that case, all requirements will be satisfied.
-
[opt] This next step is only needed if you are running a version previous to 15.07.2020. Then you will need to update the database:
flask db migrate
flask db upgrade
-
Done! You are on latest version.
See CHANGELOG for a list of changes.
Server
Another option is to host a Parasitter server so you can access it from anywhere or give access to your beloved friends/community. Installation is a little bit more complex than the local, but should be easy if you follow the steps.
WARNING: This section is under construction.
Installing the app:
- Install base dependencies:
sudo apt-get -y update
sudo apt-get -y install python3 python3-venv python3-dev
sudo apt-get -y install mysql-server postfix supervisor nginx git
Installation of MySQL will require you to enter a database root password.
- Install the application:
git clone https://github.com/pluja/Parasitter.git
cd Parasitter
- Prepare the environment:
python3 -m venv venv
source venv/bin/activate
- (venv) $
pip install -r requirements.txt
- Install deployment packages:
- (venv)
pip install gunicorn pymysql
- (venv)
- Edit the .env SECRET_KEY:
nano .env
This will open an editor. Make sure to change the SECRET_KEY to a string of your like. Make it random and long enough.
- Set up FLASK_APP environment variable:
echo "export FLASK_APP=parasitter.py" >> ~/.profile
Database configuration:
- Enter the MySQL command prompt:
mysql -u root -p
It will prompt for the "root" password. This password is the one you set on the MySQL installation.
- Create the database:
- mysql>
create database parasitter character set utf8 collate utf8_bin;
- mysql>
create user 'parasitter'@'localhost' identified by '<db-password>';
Replace
<db-password>
as the password for the database parasitter user. This one needs to match the password set on the DATABASE_URL in the .env file (See Step 5 of App installation)- mysql>
grant all privileges on parasitter.* to 'parasitter'@'localhost';
- mysql>
flush privileges;
- mysql>
quit;
- mysql>
- Upgrade the database:
- (venv)
flask db upgrade
- (venv)