Regarding 2, we're actively working on radicle-artifact as an alternative to Git LFS with transport agnostic distribution (https/p2p), attestations, and redactions.
When a repository is initialised as private [1], it's encoded in the repository identity document. The only way to change a repository to be public is to update the identity document; in the case of a repository with multiple delegates (repo maintainers in Radicle nomenclature), such a change requires a quorum to be met. So I'd say it's more than a fat-finger away from leaking.
> I was looking into how to get a radicle node running, but connected to only my own devices.
There's an open proposal [2] to introduce the concept of network configuration that would help with these kinds of use cases. Moreover, we're working on other ways to improve the collaboration experience for small teams, so stay tuned and thank you for this feedback!
I like that more people are thinking solving some of the problems of digital inheritance we face. These are problems that are so important now that so much of our lives are digital and tapping into ones actual social circle seems the best way to do this.
Also, kudos for packaging it as a static web app. That's the one platform I'm willing to bet will still function in 10 years.
I am sympathetic to the criticism of the naturalistic fallacy, however there are some aspects of modernity that are unquestionably toxic, like air pollution.
https://radicle.network/nodes/iris.radicle.network/rad%3Az4V...