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kindle-dev

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kindle-dev
·5 years ago·discuss
I've heard this effect put into more positive terms: If the ship is on a good course, making it hard to steer also makes it hard to sink.
kindle-dev
·5 years ago·discuss
Fake comment. The headline uses the word rates not beats. Not everything can be perfectly unambiguous all the time.
kindle-dev
·5 years ago·discuss
When is an index more useful than full text search? I derive a lot of pleasure when I can open a huge text on my laptop and instantly find exactly what I'm working for by searching for one or two words.
kindle-dev
·5 years ago·discuss
I'm not making China out to be an omniscient bogeyman. The U.S. has used companies to gain access to secure systems in other countries. It's just a reality that ANY country can do this. To deny that is to either be a shill, or woefully ignorant.
kindle-dev
·5 years ago·discuss
Responding to your other comment: the app has access to your camera. Nothing is stopping it from using your camera, without your knowledge, and then uploading what it captures while a user browses their TikTok feed.
kindle-dev
·5 years ago·discuss
Modern apps are obfuscated and use certificate pinning to avoid network traffic introspection. It's really not simple to decompile an app into something understandable.
kindle-dev
·5 years ago·discuss
Yes, of course it's ok. The role of a government is to do what is in the best interest of its citizens. If there is a possible threat from a foreign adversary, the government should deal with it.
kindle-dev
·5 years ago·discuss
I think you're missing the forest for the trees. Publicly posting confidential information is definitely bad. Bringing a device that can covertly collect information for adversaries is even worse.
kindle-dev
·5 years ago·discuss
I was responding to the comment asking why TikTok should be banned vs. other social media.
kindle-dev
·5 years ago·discuss
The TikTok app may have camera access and location access. It could capture images and send them to China when it detects its on a military base without the user even knowing. It’s so annoying to see “what about X” comments on every story with almost no thought put into the response.
kindle-dev
·5 years ago·discuss
What’s more likely? A service that vacuums up every piece of data vacuuming up microphone data, or the same service intentionally excluding this one random piece of data? Every time this comes up, people jump up and say “they’re definitely not listening!” But why do people think that? Facebook gathers as much data as possible, including buying a VPN to inspect supposedly private traffic. Why wouldn’t they listen to a microphone? As an anecdote, I know someone who worked on smart TVs. Part of what they implemented was a system to turn on the tv’s microphone to get an audio fingerprint of the content being watched.
kindle-dev
·5 years ago·discuss
It would be ok to discuss another topic, but this particular case was using the behavior of a private British firm to somehow make the researchers look hypocritical (or having an agenda) because they are also based in the UK
kindle-dev
·5 years ago·discuss
[flagged]
kindle-dev
·5 years ago·discuss
Network infrastructure is just a microcosm of the issues facing small countries. They need protection, access to markets and resources, investment, and access to technology just to name a few.
kindle-dev
·5 years ago·discuss
It's in the article:

"Natural gas that is consumed on the site and would have otherwise been vented or flared under the authority of the Wyoming oil and gas conservation commission has no value and is exempt from taxation as long as the natural gas is certified by the Wyoming oil and gas conservation commission as to have originated from a qualifying well,” the new law reads."
kindle-dev
·5 years ago·discuss
They have almost 0 community spread. A fact which many in the west respond to by saying that they’re faking their numbers, which completely ignores all of the counter measures they’ve taken. I have colleagues in China, and the Chinese lockdowns literally looked like a Zombie movie. It’s not surprising they were able to contain spread.
kindle-dev
·5 years ago·discuss
Why is it "very unlikely?" Does Google have a good track record of removing information voluntarily?
kindle-dev
·5 years ago·discuss
But someone told me insurance companies are bad and are stiffing those poor, struggling doctors and hospitals.
kindle-dev
·5 years ago·discuss
This only applies to non-recourse state, of which there are only 12.
kindle-dev
·5 years ago·discuss
I believe the average down payment on a house for first time buyers is around 5% these days (in the US): https://www.bankrate.com/mortgages/how-much-is-a-down-paymen...