They are obviously of the “If-It-Ain’t-Broke-Don’t-Fix-It” people. A once dominant group, they also age slowly, have the longest memories and loquaciously share them.
They are obviously of the “If-It-Ain’t-Broke-Don’t-Fix-It” people. A once dominant group, they also age slowly, have the longest memories and loquaciously share them.
^This. End stage capitalism at its finest.
Now the other manufacturers just need to do the same.
In his blog post, Tan defended the subscription-only licensing model, calling it “the industry standard.”
“Industry standard” my ass.
If Adobe hadn’t started the trend by lusting after Blizzard’s subscription model and ultimately emulating it, we’d all be a lot better off.
Not to mention our wallets being eternally thankful.
TL;DR? > The problem is strictly speaking not even in curl code. It comes with the version of LibreSSL that Apple ships and builds curl to use on their platforms.
But because they’re Apple (right next to the Pope, for infallibility), they know best; same old story, rinse’n’repeat.
Really liked their stuff back in the day. Now? It’s another walled garden they scrabble to maintain.
…researchers from NTU were working on Masterkey, an automated method of using the power of one LLM to jailbreak another.
Or: welcome to where AI becomes an arms race.
Parasites and control freaks endorse “child safety “ bill, what could possibly go wrong?
The power of lobbyists, on full display. K Street is a plague on the people of the US.
Fucking billionaires should be taxed out of existence.
That’s not good.
Then, there’s this: https://restoreprivacy.com/state-spyware-extensively-using-ads-as-distribution-channel/
For this reason alone, fuck any company banning ad blockers.
‘s a long read. Here’s the intro blurb:
An investigative data journalist and a former tech lawyer teach you how to spot tricks and hidden disclosures within these interminable documents—and even how to claw back some privacy By Jon Keegan and Jesse Woo
Gonna dive in and see what nuggets of wisdom they offer.
Ppphhht.
The internet ended the day AOL threw open its doors and allowed their users out of the walled garden.
I know, I was there.
Article didn’t actually say how the opt out process will work, just gave a buncha supposed Bard quotes on the subject.
I’m sure it’ll be fiiiiiine. /s
Oh, but Bard’ll give you plenty of chances to opt out.
Whether Sundar Pichai honors that is another matter entirely.
Holeeeshit! All that from an accelerometer?
Yes. The magnets are ridiculously strong. Several hold screen in place on my heat exchanger, to keep leaves and lawn debris at bay.
Haven’t figured out a good use for the platters, but skeet shooting has crossed my mind.
In your case prevention of DDOS via VPN guides your decisions and legit VPN users are collateral damage.
I understand your position, and as you say, no data is sold, so no real harm.
Perhaps banks are the same way.
But out of the ones I have to deal with, only one makes me drop the VPN for access. /smh
Seeing “security companies” tagging VPN IP blocks as sus, is becoming all too common; just like ad blockers are being banned.
They wanna know who you are, where you’ve been, what you’re doing and how you’re doing it…AT.ALL.TIMES.dammit!
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