Except for tha time with Windows 8 where they tried to get rid of them.
Except for tha time with Windows 8 where they tried to get rid of them.
I just want my privacy back.
It’s a discipline.
I run Emby and MythTV on a Beelink Mini PC. It is a little pricey compared to some of the options you mentioned but not by too much. It works really well and is very quiet:
https://www.amazon.com/Beelink-SER5-5560U-500GB-Computer/dp/B0B3WYVB2D
I remember when SFC was first introduced, I excitedly wrote a script to invoke it remotely so I could use it on a user’s pc when they called to fix their problem. To this day I have never run that script. This was in 1998.
“> driving out rivals, diminishing competition, inflating advertising costs, reducing revenues for news publishers and content creators, snuffing out innovation, and harming the exchange of information and ideas in the public sphere.”
I feel like it is going to be hard to prove that Google’s anti-competitive actions have inflated advertising costs. Also, did news publishers lose revenue because of Google or was it Craigslist and jobs sites that killed their classified business?
Google is definitely a monopoly and has acted badly, but proving the harm in this way is going to be tricky. The government should go after them for privacy, the place where they have clearly abused their relationship with the public. Google normalizing spying on users has created the data economy that has resulted in us being spied upon us all the time and having all of our personal data being leaked over and over again.
As someone who has administered networks and written policies like this the concern here is that you will run an open network that may be used for piracy, hacking, DDOS or to send bomb threats. Tracing down this type of behavior is required by law and allowing students to run open networks makes this near impossible.
Fmovie is a new one I never heard of before. Good thing they mentioned it so I know to avoid it in the future.
Change is hard. It has been a long road to get where we are today: major OS and Browser vendor support. Users now need to change their behavior.
Passkey is resistant to these attacks, but user adoption is not widespread enough for Discord to be able to mandate it.
Here is a famous faked photo of fairies from 1917 -> https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cottingley_Fairies
A lot of legal detail in this post. Here are three key points I pulled out the aricle:
Internet users have a First Amendment right to speak on social media—whether by posting or commenting—and that right may be infringed when the government seeks to interfere with content moderation, but it will not be infringed by the independent decisions of the platforms themselves.
Underlying these rulings is the Supreme Court’s long-awaited recognition that social media platforms routinely moderate users’ speech
This term’s cases also confirm that traditional First Amendment rules apply to social media
What are your use cases?
Did anyone read the phrase “fed up carpenter” and immediately think the was the second coming of Christ?
Librewolf is great. Secure and private by default. For compatibility it is nearly as good as Firefox.
A lot of good stuff here. The three things that are most notable for me are:
Notepadqq
Fsearch
Librewolf
How about a simple faraday shield for the key fob?
Allowing cookies for websites you are logged into makes sense. If you are going to login the site already knows who you are can track you, so you do not lose much with the exception. What I do for some sites like google services is access them from a separate browser.
It must be for wifi that they operate.