Doesn't fit.
Underrated comment. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Room_641A
> it can be tracked retroactively on virtually every street, every highway, etc. Not virtually. Actually. NSA et al can do - will they publicly tip that hand for this?
Look at that chilling effect go!
Why ammo in RV then?
Anyone working on AT&Ts infrastructure (to have familiarity with what that building even is) knows that small attack won't bring them down.
Militias are not (all) hate groups.
52% of total, last I checked.
> The problem is nearly all white-collar people in the SF Bay Area are stingy and blind to the plights of anyone else besides themselves. If this weren't the case, there wouldn't be so many homeless people living on…
This is a meme, right now, on Twitch etc.
Lack of technology education. People spend time, money, effort on things important to them. Things can't be important if they're not on someone's radar.
One could argue anyone that owns an iPhone.
Public/private keypairs. Solved problem since Nam.
Stuff that spreads through the air spreads in places where air is circulated around. This is more obvious than normal.
Accuracy mattered more than how relevant Google decided you were to society.
The labelling should be improved to educate the user more. That's it. What you're discussing is really the level of convenience, and what that does to influence user behavior.
What other security oriented apps have their own encryption scheme, independent of device system security?
Infamous.
This isn't a Signal problem. It's a pervasive problem of lack of technology and security education in the West. Not a priority for US etc to show people how to secure themselves.
You can't say a firewall is insecure because someone installed it in a network where one can walk in freely and take the passwords off of the sticky note on the desk.
Until a member of society (you?) is somehow screwed over by an Exec of one of these too-big-to-fail companies....
Techies generally like kush, not powders...swing again.
Read more comments.
Or moral.
And scooters. and revamping the US highway system with assisted driving beacons/lines etc - because they're the only ones with enough money to do so.
Doesn't fit.
Underrated comment. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Room_641A
> it can be tracked retroactively on virtually every street, every highway, etc. Not virtually. Actually. NSA et al can do - will they publicly tip that hand for this?
Look at that chilling effect go!
Why ammo in RV then?
Anyone working on AT&Ts infrastructure (to have familiarity with what that building even is) knows that small attack won't bring them down.
Militias are not (all) hate groups.
52% of total, last I checked.
> The problem is nearly all white-collar people in the SF Bay Area are stingy and blind to the plights of anyone else besides themselves. If this weren't the case, there wouldn't be so many homeless people living on…
This is a meme, right now, on Twitch etc.
Lack of technology education. People spend time, money, effort on things important to them. Things can't be important if they're not on someone's radar.
One could argue anyone that owns an iPhone.
Public/private keypairs. Solved problem since Nam.
Stuff that spreads through the air spreads in places where air is circulated around. This is more obvious than normal.
Accuracy mattered more than how relevant Google decided you were to society.
The labelling should be improved to educate the user more. That's it. What you're discussing is really the level of convenience, and what that does to influence user behavior.
What other security oriented apps have their own encryption scheme, independent of device system security?
Infamous.
This isn't a Signal problem. It's a pervasive problem of lack of technology and security education in the West. Not a priority for US etc to show people how to secure themselves.
You can't say a firewall is insecure because someone installed it in a network where one can walk in freely and take the passwords off of the sticky note on the desk.
Until a member of society (you?) is somehow screwed over by an Exec of one of these too-big-to-fail companies....
Techies generally like kush, not powders...swing again.
Read more comments.
Or moral.
And scooters. and revamping the US highway system with assisted driving beacons/lines etc - because they're the only ones with enough money to do so.