

If all that was stopping them was the domain name, surely they were never really gone?


If all that was stopping them was the domain name, surely they were never really gone?


Ahh right, that would be a bit more difficult to calculate.
I guess you could make a script which just bruteforces all combinations of a-f against an English dictionary. I might try to do that tonight.


I think that’s just 6^32, no? (Amount of options^string length). Which is 7958661109E24.


Linux users, despite being a very important part of their user base, have zero official tools for Proton Drive syncing.
I really don’t think that can be considered as “user hostile”. It’s not like they had it and took it away later. A con? Sure.
You just skipped over half of that point where they mention there was a way of using it in Linux, but they took it away


It was packed in this hunk of junk.



The fibre modem my ISP uses is pretty small, about the same size as one of those small unifi switches, but it still feels like there’s almost nothing in it.
I have taken apart the fibre modem of a different provider before, which was just a small PCB no larger than a raspberry pi and a fibre extension cable.


Well then why aren’t they doing so now? They’re already maintaining their own forks of android, should be pretty trivial to do.


I think that was mainly solved (here in the EU at least) by requiring a choice of search engine when first opening a browser.


In the 1 September update they state they found that web client and a mobile client as well, but not the API (I guess) containing the system prompt and the actual routing to the models.
Unfortunately the app developer themselves have decided to only allow installs from the play store. Not much you can do about that, though I wonder if that’s something revanced could possibly patch out of the apk.


Well that’s actually not such a crazy idea. Proton accepts cash via mail as well, so apparently it’s doable.
Oh neat, I had no idea piefed did that. Can confirm it’s not visible in thunder for Lemmy at least.
Where’s the piped link?


I mean yeah, but that doesn’t make the title any more true.


I think Wero is supposed to become the replacement for all of that, though I’m not sure if it’s gonna have similar features. For now it’s only available in a few countries unfortunately.
It can alsoake fes that perform way worse than they have anything to. See yandere simulator for example


You don’t, there’s privacy respecting ways of delivering notifications in android.
Also, a 24/7 connection to a server isn’t nearly as bad as you might think.
The connection isn’t active the whole time, it only uses any significant amount of battery if there’s actually data being sent or received. You likely already have quite a few of them anyway, how do you think systems normally listen for push notifications?
Besides all that, I read in other comments that the privacy issue was the device id firebase needs. Obviously apple also needs some kind of device id, otherwise how do they know where the notifications are going?
Did some searching, yup apple also needs a unique identifier:
When it’s time to send a notification, you generate a request that contains the notification data and a unique identifier for the user’s device.
From https://developer.apple.com/documentation/usernotifications/setting-up-a-remote-notification-server


That doesn’t have anything to do with how you install the app.
You could probably do it with http if the server properly supports the content range headers.
It’s indeed not enforced here, but on top of that the police would really like to know that you have cameras filming public space.
Not so they can do something about it, but so they know they can come to you to ask for footage if something happens.