And what's wrong with asking that? Plenty of email platforms let you change your primary SMTP address and/or add/remove aliases.
It's a legitimate question. And it could be that the lack of ability to change it has a perfectly logical answer. It still wouldn't invalidate the question.
I agree as long as the money is actually going toward building out the charging network and not just getting sucked up by corporations like the ISPs that were supposed to improve our network infrastructure.
Although it would be nice for them to let us know what is happening and when we can expect some real improvements. Maybe that info is out there, but I haven't seen it and this biased reporter sure isn't looking to do any real journalism.
In that case, if CF is taking to Traefik and not the actual origin server, you just need to forget about the origin certs altogether and use LE certs in Traefik.
If you, Traefik, and your origin server are on the same network, then it's going to be one hop regardless of whether you're hitting the Traefik proxy or the origin server. If Traefik is serving up the origin server's cert and not the LE cert, then Traefik is misconfigured to pass through instead of proxy, but I'm still not sure that's the case as it's almost harder to configure it that way than the correct way as a proxy.
What IP:port is your origin server listening on, what IP:port is Traefik listening on, and how is Traefik configured to reach the origin server?
You said Traefik is getting certs from Cloudflare, but do you mean it's getting Let's Encrypt certs using a CF DNS challenge? And if that is the case, then your browser should trust the Traefik endpoint since LE certs are publicly trusted.
Are you sure you're hitting Traefik when you get a cert warning? You need to update your internal DNS if not.
It's on the higher end of battery usage but it plays remarkably well. I play locked to 45 FPS / 90 Hz and I think I'm using the default Proton.