I didn't realise Firefox came with that sort of backdoor.
I don't really see a situation in which someone has local file read access on your machine, but doesn't otherwise have you completely owned.
2^32 milliseconds.
This isn't uncommon. There's hundreds or thousands of companies that combine [blockchain x thing], in some vague hope of getting people in the [thing] industry will give them money. There's never a technical reason for…
The way they operate, I expect that there's HTTP logs of all activity. They do not operate in a way which is conductive to privacy.
I didn't realise Firefox came with that sort of backdoor.
I don't really see a situation in which someone has local file read access on your machine, but doesn't otherwise have you completely owned.
2^32 milliseconds.
This isn't uncommon. There's hundreds or thousands of companies that combine [blockchain x thing], in some vague hope of getting people in the [thing] industry will give them money. There's never a technical reason for…
The way they operate, I expect that there's HTTP logs of all activity. They do not operate in a way which is conductive to privacy.