Interesting reaction. Is the highly negative reaction correlated with US culture maybe ?
I've used them for many years and had several complex support interactions with them.
Their customer service policy is very "API-like" in that you get exactly the t&c you paid for and nothing more. Hand-holding and soothing noises are not included in the t&c. They fuck up you get a refund, you fuck up they'll tell you exactly that.
Outside that they're very casual relaxed humans to communicate with.
I find that far more trustworthy (in the mathematical sense) than a "slick" twitter feed.
If the chips are tightly integrated propriatary black boxes like on most hw then from my POV its _physcially_ possible for them to read anything regardless of what the designers/industry say because I do not trust them.
You trust your sources that say "..simply false that the cellular modem can access arbitrary data in RAM". I don't.
Even if you claim to have personally designed, fabbed and shipped that silicon I still have no practical reason to trust.
General design failures/bugs from assumed acting-in-good-faith silicon/sw designers vs not-acting-in-good-faith silicon/sw designers.
Assuming the radio's are the primary threat to privacy then I'd prefer a design from a privacy activist company who explicityly designs the hw so that the less trustable parts are forced behind physcial and defined interface "firewalls".
consider the concept that lots of businesses operate perfectly fine whilst temporarily having full physical control over
physcial objects owned by their customers
why not treat data the same way ?
yes it will be very disruptive to some businesses. i hope.
i fear people will "want it" when it gets good enough
the combination of "dumb screen(TV?) as interface" with "any/all content* you want (cheaper with ads)" will be very attractive to the 99% of humans who dont want to think about computing
is widespread personal physical ownership and control of general purpose computing a feature of the future ?
what laws do we need to think about to prevent harm that may cause ?
is ordering silence and secretly seizing control of the publication technology (ie website) then maintaining a false warrant canary a way around compelled speech ?
if so then regular live press-conference/video appearances would be the only practical implementation method.
if they say nothing and exit then the canary is dead.
An important detail in the US juristiction certainly.
On a practical basis i cannot evaluate the jurisprudence involved and I would assume the number of people who credibly can is very small, especially in the context of "secret courts for national security reasons".
A useful test would be if any of those few had demonstrated a personal risk using this as a defense and succeeded.
The rest of us can only guess the risk based on the reputation of the entites involved.
A warrant canary is utterly useless as a defense.
Any secret legal order to alter IT systems (the specific threat model it is most often suggested for) can logically also include an order to maintain a fake warrant canary.
I've used them for many years and had several complex support interactions with them.
Their customer service policy is very "API-like" in that you get exactly the t&c you paid for and nothing more. Hand-holding and soothing noises are not included in the t&c. They fuck up you get a refund, you fuck up they'll tell you exactly that. Outside that they're very casual relaxed humans to communicate with.
I find that far more trustworthy (in the mathematical sense) than a "slick" twitter feed.
Politness does not imply trustworthiness.