What does AMP have to do with anything? The fine article is about flagging potential URL homograph attacks. It's a reasonable thing for a browser to do, since those attacks are incredibly hard to spot.
I don't know why Wired clickbaited the headline like this.
The cement tiles around Building 17 at Microsoft are actually like a physical graveyard. So many dead products! The 90's CD-ROM multimedia era generated a lot of dead-end franchises.
I could see this seriously effing with software jobs. Even if a company intends to keep their noses squeaky clean, every developer hired becomes an additional risk. Companies will try to control more of the process from the top down (and that works out great LOL) and they'll try to do more with less. Or GTFO of the country.
Too bad Edge doesn't support Safe Browsing mode. IIRC the API is publicly available too; MS doesn't want to swallow its pride and implement a client for it.
He said that he was going to get professional help. I doubt that a dose of empathy would take off his edge. I'm expecting that he'll come back a much more effective leader.
A lot of software projects fail. Why the blind faith that LN will inevitably get better?
ICOs are like this too. Billions of dollars are rallied for technologies that don't exist, for founders who don't exist (their headshots are usually pilfered from stock photos), for problems that don't exist. And yet, funding!
This insanity would never happen if cryptocurrency wasn't involved. The multilevel marketing energy of crypto turns off critical thinking.