

Nobody working on the inside has ever leaked anything regarding this potentially massive breach of privacy? A perfectly secret conspiracy by everyone involved?
Nobody working on the inside has ever leaked anything regarding this potentially massive breach of privacy? A perfectly secret conspiracy by everyone involved?
FWIW I’m not seeing this on the Play Store for Firefox 136.0.1 on my Pixel 8a, and I’m not seeing any warnings on Beta or Nightly either:
Maybe I’ve gone off the deep end of cynicism at this point but the fact that the shitrag The Daily Mail is reporting it this way just makes me think manufacturing a stock drop is the whole plan.
Josh Johnson. https://youtube.com/@joshjohnsoncomedy
If we’re limiting to mass-produced: I can inhale a near infinite amount of Andes mints.
If not: French Broad Chocolate in Asheville NC makes a chocolate creme brulee that… nnnngggh
Makes me think of
I could see the Golgafrinchan telephone sanitizer situation coming to pass.
I’m not sure why I thought this, but I thought Carole King died in the late 80s. Nope, she’s still kickin’.
The version of this I hate is when a program has built in hard sub translation for foreign language sections, which get covered up by the soft subs only saying “< speaking [language] >”. So now my deaf ass can understand one language or the other, but not both without toggling captions on and off constantly.
from a shitty movie extremely loosely based on good sci-fi
Judging by this comment thread I’m not the only one who’s like “you can have them, but I don’t know if you’re going to want them”
But when Youtube shares the key with me/my client the first time, is that also encrypted?
Here’s an explanation of what happens during the initial TLS handshake.
…if ISP automated the process of gathering keys and decrypting web traffic for a certain site with them for all users, would that work for them?
Not sure this is exactly what you’re asking, but there’s the concept of forward secrecy for defending recorded encrypted traffic from future key compromises.
Analysis the Spider is a great trickster folklore character from the Akan in Ghana. I loved these stories as a kid and had a great book on tape.
It looks like autocorrect attacked KinNectar. In case anyone wants to read further, the spider’s name is Anansi.
Emphasis on “when it thinks”. Not much point to a privacy control that the device can just ignore for unspecified reasons, and they had 150+ instances of that occurring in this data set.