And by using the location of your phone, and the timing of the swipes, Coin can learn a lot about your shopping habits. Not as much as the credit card company (e.g. not the amount of the purchase), but still quite a lot.
No, because chips, by design, can't be copied by the user. They are roughly small computers which encrypt messages with a secret key, but the key itself is never let out outside the chip. You would need some cooperation…
But with Coin, they can potentially copy all your cards, instead of just one, by pressing the button multiple times. It's not obvious how to prevent that without affecting the UX.
Since Google dropped Jabber server federation, open XMPP are less useful. And, for voice/video, getting them to work through NAT is a pain, while Skype JustWorks™. Plus, it is a really good solution: I can change my…
They did backtrack, but because of PR reasons, not legal ones. Unless there are antitrust issues, it's perfectly legal to offer different prices to different customers.
Actually, most warning implementations punish those users that disable cookies in their browsers by forcing them to see the obnoxious warning every time they visit the site. This is arguably worse than the previous…
You can keep DDG as your default search engine, and use the !g bang command to redirect the most difficult queries to Google. You get the best of both worlds (except for some cognitive load when deciding which engine to…
And by using the location of your phone, and the timing of the swipes, Coin can learn a lot about your shopping habits. Not as much as the credit card company (e.g. not the amount of the purchase), but still quite a lot.
No, because chips, by design, can't be copied by the user. They are roughly small computers which encrypt messages with a secret key, but the key itself is never let out outside the chip. You would need some cooperation…
But with Coin, they can potentially copy all your cards, instead of just one, by pressing the button multiple times. It's not obvious how to prevent that without affecting the UX.
Since Google dropped Jabber server federation, open XMPP are less useful. And, for voice/video, getting them to work through NAT is a pain, while Skype JustWorks™. Plus, it is a really good solution: I can change my…
They did backtrack, but because of PR reasons, not legal ones. Unless there are antitrust issues, it's perfectly legal to offer different prices to different customers.
Actually, most warning implementations punish those users that disable cookies in their browsers by forcing them to see the obnoxious warning every time they visit the site. This is arguably worse than the previous…
You can keep DDG as your default search engine, and use the !g bang command to redirect the most difficult queries to Google. You get the best of both worlds (except for some cognitive load when deciding which engine to…