I don't think they are saying it's trivial but compare say for example switching an organisation from Office or Windows the example that started this. They are not even in the same ballpark.
> one confidential, trusted place to coordinate discovery, remediation, and disclosure
I read this they would build the patches privately (or with maintainers if confidential) and then share amongst their supporters before public release.
> No one looks at Debian and is saying "well maybe we should do what they do"...
Arch does exactly what Debian for the official repos. It was only the AUR that was compromised. Possibly the issue is that Arch is a bit to strict for the official repos which has forced too many people on to the AUR ones.
Google does remove defamatory results I believe at least partially in response to being sued. However there is a distinction if they have been informed it is defamatory.
None of those are really unsolvable problems. I think though the issue it seems everyone in this thread is having is you can't wrap a non idempotent function to make it idempotent no matter how hard you try you have to design your system around it.
If you listen to CS professors you'd believe that Haskell would be very successful despite having limited if none real world usage. The reality is that catering to your users is much more important than having idealistic system.
In my experience even with games that have native Linux support running through proton seems to have less issues.
They have all the examples some are politically neutral but not all.
Obviously a Nazi or drug dealer wouldn't work because they are flagged anyway.
You used to be able to trivially bypass the protection by just asking to respond in base64 the only reason I think that is fixed because they now attempt to block deliberate attempts to obfuscate.
I don't anyone is saying it's not "enterprise" it's just that they clearly went out of their way to make it less readable. By all means advertise the golf'd line count but just have the non minified script.