Inspired by a comment on my last post.

I feel like I never have a solution that allows me to control it while also being automated to such a degree that I don’t have a huge confusing backup if I don’t do finances for days or weeks.

  • tburkhol@lemmy.world
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    24 days ago

    This won’t help you, but I want to brag. I started using Quicken to track my finances at the turn of the century, back when it was all local storage. Quicken 2012 was the last iteration that used http (not https) to update stock prices. When they discontinued support, I captured the interaction and deciphered the formats. Wrote a proxy to intercept the request, look up the security info, and send back the data.

    So, I self-host quicken.com. It’s saved me having to update Quicken or submit to their subscription model.

      • neinhorn@lemmy.ca
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        24 days ago

        He mentioned it used http, so the traffic is not encrypted. You can easily monitor http traffic with wireshark.

      • tburkhol@lemmy.world
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        24 days ago

        Super easy, as it turns out. I run my own DNS and web servers, so I pointed quicken.com at my web server to capture the request, then used curl to capture the response. Both turned out to be plain ASCII, request like

        stk.1=SMCI;.2=NVDA;.3=INTC;

        as POST data, and responses like

        qwin.quotes.ASTM.symbol 4 ASTM
        .last 7 18.7400
        .time 10 1573074000
        .time.str 5 16:00
        .change 6 0.4000

        plus a whole slew of other optional fields for fundamentals, dividends, etc. It was a simpler time on the internet, when no one cared about leaking data and companies didn’t care if a handful of geeks reversed engineered their data structures.