They've been pivoting the Firefox name to encompass many privacy-minded tools for a while now. I would argue that a Firefox VPN strengthens that branding.
> You're taking it on trust that it's anonymized to the point of being impossible to make any inferences about individuals, which is a huge leap, not only in trust, but data science.
I don't doubt that someone at Mozilla could de-anonymize that data, but I have enough trust in the organization that they won't
Is it any safer than pasting your auth tokens into a standalone application like Postman? That can just as easily send that information somewhere else, but now you can't press F12, get a network tab, and look at outgoing requests.
> but on the other hand, differences in "identical circuits" are often plainly audible.
I wonder how much of that is component tolerances. If you have two identical circuits with +-1% in resistors and +-5% in caps, how different would these sound with the components in each circuit at opposite ends of the tolerance range?
I really like a lot of functional programming techniques in JS, but the Left/Right style of error handling just always seems messy and unreadable to me.
I'm a pretty non-picky eater, but I feel like I can usually empathize with other people's picky eating habits. Not drinking water however, is something that I just can't wrap my mind around.
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2004/09/06/the-ketchup-co...