I'd be happy if we stop calling it 2FA and instead say "2of3" or something. So many providers require you to use 2FA, but almost no one forces you to include fallback authentication.
Mobile networks are two-way systems. If you have perfect reception of the mobile network - let's say full bars! - then that doesn't mean the mobile network also has reception of your mobile device. Most of the time,…
Talk to somebody. You're entering a vicious circle in your mind. As stupid as it may sound, call a suicide hotline if you need to talk.
The article doesn't state it was better than traffic lights. I think small cells in traffic lights are already reality, even if not widespread, the small cells exist. The article presents a novel, non-obvious approach…
No worries, it's part of the whole story. I don't particularly see the point of kill switches when you trust the software. I acknowledge the efforts in hardware integration they do. I'd love to see the Linux desktop…
In Germany the packages are usually given to a neighbor. Amazon's own delivery service sometimes leaves it in front of your door, but mostly in houses with multiple flats. When it's gone, they just deliver again. Does…
Matlab has a somewhat different focus, but essentially offers the experience you describe. (just want to say: this concept is around for ages and Jupyter could adapt some of Matlab's GUI features for sure)
The software is shipped by those who create the phone itself. If you don't trust anybody, you can't get a piece of silicon to connect to mobile networks and draw a website on a screen. Any open source hardware…
The open source world isn't prepared for large-scale software delivery either. It works with the core software of Linux distributions, who deliver to administrators around the world. But userland software and…
The author argues that open source magically creates a wonderful world of security and privacy. Quotes like the following make me wonder if the author every touched a software project: "Like the Linux and open source…
I'd be happy if we stop calling it 2FA and instead say "2of3" or something. So many providers require you to use 2FA, but almost no one forces you to include fallback authentication.
Mobile networks are two-way systems. If you have perfect reception of the mobile network - let's say full bars! - then that doesn't mean the mobile network also has reception of your mobile device. Most of the time,…
Talk to somebody. You're entering a vicious circle in your mind. As stupid as it may sound, call a suicide hotline if you need to talk.
The article doesn't state it was better than traffic lights. I think small cells in traffic lights are already reality, even if not widespread, the small cells exist. The article presents a novel, non-obvious approach…
No worries, it's part of the whole story. I don't particularly see the point of kill switches when you trust the software. I acknowledge the efforts in hardware integration they do. I'd love to see the Linux desktop…
In Germany the packages are usually given to a neighbor. Amazon's own delivery service sometimes leaves it in front of your door, but mostly in houses with multiple flats. When it's gone, they just deliver again. Does…
Matlab has a somewhat different focus, but essentially offers the experience you describe. (just want to say: this concept is around for ages and Jupyter could adapt some of Matlab's GUI features for sure)
The software is shipped by those who create the phone itself. If you don't trust anybody, you can't get a piece of silicon to connect to mobile networks and draw a website on a screen. Any open source hardware…
The open source world isn't prepared for large-scale software delivery either. It works with the core software of Linux distributions, who deliver to administrators around the world. But userland software and…
The author argues that open source magically creates a wonderful world of security and privacy. Quotes like the following make me wonder if the author every touched a software project: "Like the Linux and open source…