RSA has been deprecated for a while. It still has nothing to do with the fact that you compared a hashing algorithm with a symmetric encryption algorithm, a literal apple to orange comparison
AES is used for encryption while GHASH is a hash(checksum) algorithm. Quite different. Also the algo time is a function of the input size. Not sure how you can encrypt 1byte and 2TB in constant time. You seem like you need to read more on this stuff.
It could be argued that every time a company comes out with a new product they are adding alternative revenue streams. By this definition it happens all the time.
Very few cash-cows last forever which is why it is important to look at how a company is reinvesting in alternative streams of income when forecasting the long term
Because the speed bump you are trying to erect only addresses the issue of people finding websites like 8chan, it does nothing to address the issue of why people stay on sites like 8chan as you described. Once they find the new site, they will be able to visit it again with ease. Furthermore, they will feel more victimized by society and point to their old sites being banned as evidence that society hates them; ergo, why they begin to hate society.
Death Valley is also in a valley surrounded by tall mountains loaded with cell tower equipment so the signal propagates pretty easily because there are minimal line-of-sight obstructions.
Nobody in the history of the world has been radicalized because it was easy to access. They were radicalized because something they read resonated with something they experienced. People don't just accidentally turn into mass murderers because they read some pamphlet, a lot has to go wrong.
Does anyone have insight on the implications this vulnerability might have on Remote Execution. Is controlling the access to the physical machine sufficient?