It has always been. That’s why it’s called “News” not “Olds”. Getting access to the most up to date information about the world has always been compelling. Whether it’s where the best hunting or foraging grounds were,…
Looks like Signal[1] is still the way to go. Interesting that the Chinese Government has cracked telegram even though it and Signal are not available in China without VPN [2]…
My US centric bias is showing. Thanks for the reminder! I suppose that a phonics lesson in Oz probably sounds a bit different than in the US. And they’re both effective. That’s fun to think about.
This article buries the lead. TLDR: Phonics works, Current strategies don’t. What actually works is the shortest part of the article. It’s infatuation with what doesn’t work puts what does work more than halfway into…
Cool! My first negative post. Maybe more context is valuable. We know HKers are getting more and more tracking from the mainland government and are switching to applications not typically used for communication and…
Apple has definitely accommodated the Chinese government’s desires before: https://9to5mac.com/2018/05/19/apple-cracking-down-on-callki...
Please excuse the tinfoil hat - is there any chance that this vulnerability was reintroduced at the request of the Chinese government to allow easier access to Hong Kong protesters devices?
This article doesn’t mention a strategy you can take for breaking the wave: http://trafficwaves.org/ I originally found this info via the happy mutants at boingboing:…
It has always been. That’s why it’s called “News” not “Olds”. Getting access to the most up to date information about the world has always been compelling. Whether it’s where the best hunting or foraging grounds were,…
Looks like Signal[1] is still the way to go. Interesting that the Chinese Government has cracked telegram even though it and Signal are not available in China without VPN [2]…
My US centric bias is showing. Thanks for the reminder! I suppose that a phonics lesson in Oz probably sounds a bit different than in the US. And they’re both effective. That’s fun to think about.
This article buries the lead. TLDR: Phonics works, Current strategies don’t. What actually works is the shortest part of the article. It’s infatuation with what doesn’t work puts what does work more than halfway into…
Cool! My first negative post. Maybe more context is valuable. We know HKers are getting more and more tracking from the mainland government and are switching to applications not typically used for communication and…
Apple has definitely accommodated the Chinese government’s desires before: https://9to5mac.com/2018/05/19/apple-cracking-down-on-callki...
Please excuse the tinfoil hat - is there any chance that this vulnerability was reintroduced at the request of the Chinese government to allow easier access to Hong Kong protesters devices?
This article doesn’t mention a strategy you can take for breaking the wave: http://trafficwaves.org/ I originally found this info via the happy mutants at boingboing:…