

What happened to all the phone apps that made an effort to detect IMSI catchers, like SnoopSnitch, which appears to be abandoned (F-Droid reports some fishy anti-features?).


What happened to all the phone apps that made an effort to detect IMSI catchers, like SnoopSnitch, which appears to be abandoned (F-Droid reports some fishy anti-features?).


I currently use it, and have largely mitigated issues in a similar way.


Microsoft can’t seem to figure out sync, ever since Briefcase, if you involve multiple computers you invariably end up with more and more conflicting copies. It’s embarrassing.
Office itself is insanely bloated is a world with Markdown, open data formats, and easy access to scripting. They used some pretty unethical tactics to make OOXML a “standard” to stop governments from switching to an actual standard: ODF-based Libre Office.


Zen has “workspaces”, which I don’t get at all. Profiles seems like too much, containers works fine for me.
Crazy all the useless nonsense Mozilla has room for, since they helped kill RSS by dropping browser UI support for it for “simplification”. It was the same rationale for removing live bookmarks and Shift+Enter to add .net to an address and Ctrl+Shift+Enter for .org.


What’s with this “first” narrative? Is CNBC trying to encourage more?
Naming pets after food always seems like incredibly poor taste to me.


The liability is obviously not high enough if keeping and sharing this data works out positively. Even if the parties involved weren’t obviously evil, the risk to the people is too high for them to accept the risk with only trivial, speculative improvements.


I just used Handbrake, but there has been one or two discs that it couldn’t see, presumably due to some overly aggressive protection.


Who said anything about “all” of “them”?
Which countries were you thinking about, as examples?
Why the skepticism about the English abilities of a nation founded by former American slaves and Americans of African descent?
At that speed, the risk of running over anyone is pretty low.