So did I apparently. In that case I strongly suggest setting the default page to about:blank instead of that start.me crap.
So did I apparently. In that case I strongly suggest setting the default page to about:blank instead of that start.me crap.
Your system is fully updated from at least the kernel/initramfs and up. Next you’re running a system that has additional security measures.
So this breaks down to: What is firmware and are you aware of any issues in it? If no then there’s no reason to get a new phone.
I’m not aware of any firmware security issues for any Android phone assuming firmware is pbl, sbl, aboot, modem or on-chip and even if there was they would be hard to exploit given your up to date and hardened system, but that’s all theoretical and also apply to any new phone you would purchase.
Alternatives for flashable smartphones are Fairphone, Nothing Phone, Teracube or any Murena.
A bridge is in XMPP speak called a transport if you want to improve your search for one.
I don’t know if you missed it, but the link was to a list of phones that are confirmed to support custom keys.
See this: https://github.com/chenxiaolong/avbroot/issues/299
Ironically SeaMonkey, the continuation of Mozilla Suite, seems lighter than Firefox.
I’d have answered the same. Burning so much energy to know what date it is deserves a snarky response.
See this: https://github.com/chenxiaolong/avbroot/issues/299
The issue with the Pixel seems to be a a build-up of static in the LCD.
If the mail is sent unencrypted the admin can read it. What I have is a script that encrypt incoming e-mail with the users key, so that they are stored encrypted on the harddrive. That at least protect against an intruder reading past e-mails. I use a Perl script written by Mike Cardwell for that.
Another service you might like to have for your users is WKD/WKS, so that senders clients can automatically fetch the public key for your users.
I am abit more hardcore about it. If bank fucks around, i will fucking move.
Thank you. That’s someone willing to make a change.
Megaphone appears to be a Spotify advertising platform for podcasts. https://megaphone.spotify.com/
Give us a link to the rss feed and let’s investigate. I’m not experiencing this.
Automatic Content Recognition (ACR) [42] is widely used for second-party tracking in smart TVs. As shown in Figure 1, ACR periodically captures frames (and/or audio), builds a fingerprint of the content, and then shares it with an ACR server for matching it against a database of known content (e.g., movies, ads, live feed). When the fingerprint matches, ACR server can determine exactly what piece of content is being watched on the smart TV.
Yes, always from https://gìthub.com
You could try out Linux Mint¹, they’re Ubuntu based and disable Snap by default².
It’s a pillar of democracy to protect the autonomy of the people.
It is a human right…
You could open up the developer tools of the browser, if Palemoon has it, and see the value of the
Accept-Language
header your browser send to sites. If that’s correct, and there are no cookies set that determines language, it has to guessing based on IP.