> people need to learn they shouldn't trust apps made by these giant adzillas.
I do wish life were that simple. Users (including myself) get value out of natively installed apps. Until that changes, this suggestion is impractical.
Moreover, Firefox makes it super easy to screenshot individual elements on a webpage, such as photos, by automatically determining the screenshot boundaries, which means I don't have to manually drag the screenshot area.
> sealing changes the lifetime of a mapping, i.e. the sealed mapping won’t be unmapped till the process terminates or the exec system call is invoked. Applications can apply sealing to any virtual memory region from userspace, but it is crucial to thoroughly analyze the mapping’s lifetime prior to apply the sealing.
> We invented the concept of right and wrong, for a reason. Or true and false, same thing.
Ah morally that's correct. But in general, such thinking is giving up too much.
Capital T Truth exists irrespective of humans, no? For instance, Quantum Mechanics was True before it was discovered, and would have remained True whether or not there were ever any humans to investigate it. The same for whatever base reality is.
> The experience of my own existence - and the assumed irrefutability of it - is based on features beyond my control. How do I make my heart beat?
The way we experience it, sure. The fact that we experience something, be it a true reality or an illusion in a matrix, is irrefutable. That's exactly "what cogito, ergo sum" [0] is talking about. In fact, thinking along these lines is what led Descartes to come up with this principle. In a world of uncertainty where we cannot even trust our own senses, how can we arrive at any Truth? And he realized: everything else we think and experience could be false, but the fact that I am something that is able to think and exist is itself a truth that no one can take away! It's history is pretty interesting.
> our brains are inherently limited, hence cannot be trusted.
Yeah I agree with this in general. When it comes to logic though, it is hard to see how for instance the law of the excluded middle could be wrong. But then that may be just the limited brain talking :)
> Cogito, ergo sum is a meaningless statement in this context.
Not sure how. The fact that I exist is irrefutable. Everything else could be just a dream, say if base reality is that I'm a brain-in-a-vat, but my own experience says that I exist, and no one can deny that, not even God.
> Take quantum mechanics for example. Makes all our logic go away.
That doesn't sound like the right way to think. QM, and science in general, is based on observations, and those are always subject to revision. Tomorrow, all laws of physics could flip, making all our current science moot. The only role of logic here is to make sure that our techniques and conclusions are consistent and not affected by the arbitrary whims of human thoughts and desires. Logic actually helps humans go beyond the biological limitations.
We may not be able to probe the system directly, but we can take guesses at some of its properties using a powerful tool: logic.
For instance, if it is true that something cannot come out of nothing (ex nihilo nihil fit), and its clearly true that something exists (cogito, ergo sum), then it must be the case that whatever base reality is, it must have always existed. This base reality could be god or some base physical laws or something else, but unless someone can show that the premise is incorrect, we can surmise the eternal nature of reality.