The headline is extremely optimistic, but it’s not clickbait.
The headline is extremely optimistic, but it’s not clickbait.
Words are cheap, and they’ve got fuck-you money.
Considering you can assign any IME to any file, that means technically it supports everything from plain text to proprietary binary data.
I’m sure it’s already happening.
Not just games, movies too. And anything that gets Tencent money ends up with subtle pro-China propaganda.
That doesn’t mean it’s good.
The ministry said talks with the cardinal, in effect Pope Francis’s number two in the Vatican hierarchy, also focused on the “reasons for the geopolitical crisis, a direct consequence of the consistent anti-Russian policies of Western countries”.
No I’m pretty sure the crisis is a consequence of Russia invading Ukraine
Space.com really doesn’t have good quality articles.
How do you figure? If the DRM depends on them, doesn’t that give them the power to destroy it?
How dare journalists be compensated for their labor!
That’s the thing, though, it’s not a loophole. It’s intentional. It makes a good headline, but it doesn’t really do much.
Much like California’s other good-sounding laws, the fine print is what gets you on both ends, both in the law and in the EULA you agree to when signing up that’s going to say that all transactions are explicitly a terminable and revocable license.
Costco doesn’t have discounted pricing, do they? They just have the one membership price, right? I’ve never shopped there so I don’t know.
Flat black.
Which places have a “discount with card” program that also don’t/didn’t sell at full retail price?
Maybe just “humans”?
The weirdest one I found was a site that would only check to see if what you entered started with the correct password. So if your password was hunter2 and you tried hunter246, it would let you in.
Which means not only were they storing the password, but they had to go out of their way to use the wrong kind of string comparison.
ClamAV is great for exactly one thing: checking the “has antivirus” checkbox on company security audits.
Don’t get me wrong, it’s a real AV product, but there’s no real need for it. You’ll get much better results just being careful about what you run and having a system and network firewall. And not running everything as root.
Mine is the null string. They’ll never guess it!
Sure, if you want powerful processors. But if you don’t need a lot of power, you could make this into a prox card that’s thin, light, and flexible, and can do whatever cryptography you need on-chip.