Their failure to do that is by design.
Their failure to do that is by design.
It’s an authorization to give the executive branch the authority to ban. Completely different.
I’m not sure “Open Home Foundation” was the best name to give a privacy focused advocacy program. It kind of sounds like the opposite.
Why scrape Lemmy when you could set up your own activitypub server, subscribe to everything, and let all the other hosts send the data to you in a format that’s already formatted in a way that’s easy to add to your training data.
If AI is outlawed, only outlaws will have AI
Time is a flat circle
I don’t think hoping so makes it likely.
Something that I don’t see mentioned, is that gaben is a mortal being, and there’s no plan as far as we can tell what happens to the company when he retires.
Even if he runs the company “perfectly” until the day he dies, at some point it gets sold off to the highest bidder, and whoever that is will want a return on their investment. Someone will slaughter that golden goose, it’s only a matter of time.
makes software for pirates
please avoid pirated versions
Good luck with that.
This analysis is spot on
Carole and Tuesday, especially if you’ve seen Cowboy Bebop
Charles for Workgroups 3.11?
You should update your kernel at least once every 10 years
At least YouTube is recommending videos by color now
Good luck! I’ve been very happy with my microos installs. I’ve got kalpa on my desktop and aeon on my laptop. I’m following a project that uses a microos base for the Steam Deck too (which is ironic since the steam deck is what made me aware of read only root Linux and flatpak in the first place).
Here’s the actual relevant part
These are security risks to be sure, and while these permissions are (mostly) on the surface, possibly defensible, together they do clearly represent an app trying to gather all of the data that it can.
However, a lot of info from this report is overblown. For example code compilation is sketchy to be sure, but without a privilege escalation attack, it can’t do anything the app couldn’t do with an update.
Also, there’s some weird language in the report, like counting the green security issues in other apps (like tiktok) as if they were also a problem, despite the image showing that green here means it doesn’t present that particular risk.
All of this to say, if you have temu, probably uninstall it. It’s clearly collecting all the data it can get.
But it’s unlikely to be the immediate threat that will have China taking over your phone like this report implies.