That's factually incorrect. No one in the EU can sue a California company for failing to comply with EU laws so long as the company does not have a physical presence in the EU. They'd have to block their site or…
I accept payments from the EU and do not comply with GDPR. They can't sue me in my country's court for violating their laws. It really is that simple. They'd have no repercussions except to block my site - and I'm…
You don't reside there, you're not liable to abide by their laws. I run a small US company, I don't have to comply with GDPR for example. Same applies here. I don't see why any company would implement this, perhaps…
There've been a few cases where the ransomware was not decryptable - sites like BleepingComputer frequently discuss which ransomware have been cracked by researchers, which are currently actively run and will provide…
I feel this is actually a decent service for a few reasons: - Many average users don't want to understand cryptocurrencies, how to safely and securely buy and use it is a challenge in and of itself. - They're on the…
> That sounds like a contradiction --- if you can already execute code, I'd say you're quite privileged. If you're in a VM, you have no privileges over the host CPU, you can't switch to another VM or to the host itself.…
I only focused on the JAMA study as I'd seen it before, sorry about that I see it may have looked pretty slanted now, I wanted to have a better look at the positive metaanalysis, however the link on wikipedia was…
If you don't believe me, I'd highly recommend checking out this paper: https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamainternalmedicine/fullar... "We found low evidence of no effect or insufficient evidence of any effect of…
Did you read your own link? One line from it mentions the study that actually brought me to this conclusion: "A meta-analysis on meditation research published in JAMA in 2014,[167] (that included a combined total of…
Who hasn't had a bad experience with spirituality? This is the same kind of thing that's used to promote anti-vax campaigns and scam people out of thousands of dollars for fake medical treatments.
I mean the whole idea of "mindfulness" and "meditation" are the sort of pseudoscientific bullshit that just plain don't belong in a scientific class. Sure, they may have some benefits, but they're essentially just…
Or like they already don't make them for the Switch... https://www.reddit.com/r/SwitchPirates/comments/9lspva/compl...
They can't just pay BAT directly out to an address and bypass KYC by not providing an exchange? Would seem a really stupid move...
> Like - imagine if US was attacked and the attacker killed 60 million Americans. I can almost guarantee that no matter how strongly Americans believe in the 1st amendment, saying that it hasn't happened would be made…
I'd argue the type of malware described in this article is fairly to completely harmless to the user. Harm to ad networks and a bit of wasted bandwidth is basically the worst case scenario. The wasted bandwidth would be…
> because you can just ask for permission from Android You cannot ask for permission to bypass sandbox restrictions on Android. You need root access, which means physical access to do things like unlock the bootloader…
Why exactly should that be illegal? The government should not be the decider of truths. At least if private entities implement this kind of thing, those who wish can still discuss it someplace else. Though pushing these…
A redacted version of it, but yes.
I'd say that the sandboxing introduced by mobile OSes today solves the vast majority of the problem. By isolating applications and introducing permissions, malware that can steal or encrypt user data isn't possible even…
BuzzFeed News is a trash rag, what are you expecting?
Good. This is what advertising agencies asked for and what they deserve. Implement a "click button to get money" system means of course people are going to try to beat that any way they can. I'm surprised any web…
I think the main factor here is that the Chinese government spying on me likely would have no impact on my life, while the US government spying on me has a direct impact. So as an average US citizen, I should be far…
What you seem to be saying is that they're sending location data periodically even after disabling location history. That I believe is false. Any location sending after that is by user or app demand. Achieving this on…
From your linked article: > For example, Google stores a snapshot of where you are when you merely open its Maps app Yeah, that's exactly the kind of thing I'm talking about. In order to download map tiles around you,…
Yes, this is why I said most of what I feel is problematic, you're able to disable automatic location collection but not all location collection. Your opening maps question is an interesting one, I automatically assume…
That's factually incorrect. No one in the EU can sue a California company for failing to comply with EU laws so long as the company does not have a physical presence in the EU. They'd have to block their site or…
I accept payments from the EU and do not comply with GDPR. They can't sue me in my country's court for violating their laws. It really is that simple. They'd have no repercussions except to block my site - and I'm…
You don't reside there, you're not liable to abide by their laws. I run a small US company, I don't have to comply with GDPR for example. Same applies here. I don't see why any company would implement this, perhaps…
There've been a few cases where the ransomware was not decryptable - sites like BleepingComputer frequently discuss which ransomware have been cracked by researchers, which are currently actively run and will provide…
I feel this is actually a decent service for a few reasons: - Many average users don't want to understand cryptocurrencies, how to safely and securely buy and use it is a challenge in and of itself. - They're on the…
> That sounds like a contradiction --- if you can already execute code, I'd say you're quite privileged. If you're in a VM, you have no privileges over the host CPU, you can't switch to another VM or to the host itself.…
I only focused on the JAMA study as I'd seen it before, sorry about that I see it may have looked pretty slanted now, I wanted to have a better look at the positive metaanalysis, however the link on wikipedia was…
If you don't believe me, I'd highly recommend checking out this paper: https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamainternalmedicine/fullar... "We found low evidence of no effect or insufficient evidence of any effect of…
Did you read your own link? One line from it mentions the study that actually brought me to this conclusion: "A meta-analysis on meditation research published in JAMA in 2014,[167] (that included a combined total of…
Who hasn't had a bad experience with spirituality? This is the same kind of thing that's used to promote anti-vax campaigns and scam people out of thousands of dollars for fake medical treatments.
I mean the whole idea of "mindfulness" and "meditation" are the sort of pseudoscientific bullshit that just plain don't belong in a scientific class. Sure, they may have some benefits, but they're essentially just…
Or like they already don't make them for the Switch... https://www.reddit.com/r/SwitchPirates/comments/9lspva/compl...
They can't just pay BAT directly out to an address and bypass KYC by not providing an exchange? Would seem a really stupid move...
> Like - imagine if US was attacked and the attacker killed 60 million Americans. I can almost guarantee that no matter how strongly Americans believe in the 1st amendment, saying that it hasn't happened would be made…
I'd argue the type of malware described in this article is fairly to completely harmless to the user. Harm to ad networks and a bit of wasted bandwidth is basically the worst case scenario. The wasted bandwidth would be…
> because you can just ask for permission from Android You cannot ask for permission to bypass sandbox restrictions on Android. You need root access, which means physical access to do things like unlock the bootloader…
Why exactly should that be illegal? The government should not be the decider of truths. At least if private entities implement this kind of thing, those who wish can still discuss it someplace else. Though pushing these…
A redacted version of it, but yes.
I'd say that the sandboxing introduced by mobile OSes today solves the vast majority of the problem. By isolating applications and introducing permissions, malware that can steal or encrypt user data isn't possible even…
BuzzFeed News is a trash rag, what are you expecting?
Good. This is what advertising agencies asked for and what they deserve. Implement a "click button to get money" system means of course people are going to try to beat that any way they can. I'm surprised any web…
I think the main factor here is that the Chinese government spying on me likely would have no impact on my life, while the US government spying on me has a direct impact. So as an average US citizen, I should be far…
What you seem to be saying is that they're sending location data periodically even after disabling location history. That I believe is false. Any location sending after that is by user or app demand. Achieving this on…
From your linked article: > For example, Google stores a snapshot of where you are when you merely open its Maps app Yeah, that's exactly the kind of thing I'm talking about. In order to download map tiles around you,…
Yes, this is why I said most of what I feel is problematic, you're able to disable automatic location collection but not all location collection. Your opening maps question is an interesting one, I automatically assume…