There is utterly nothing you can do to prevent the american heathcare apparatus from obtaining and sharing your heath data. It will be exchanged between your state agency, care provider and insurers constantly. Your insurer will likely de-identify data in the event of a leak. The other two may not (save regulatory requirements) I have first hand experience here.
Bingo. I'll say the unicorn is the group that can bend hipaa such that customer data can be more easily exchanged between providers. There is already a group making a product that most health insurance companies utilize for this and they dont know it.
Before I left the industry I saw many dropping third party analytics and building their own solutions in need of more m&a dollars from declining membership nationally.
>Search for something generic like "computer" and you can see an example of how hard it is to get information instead of ads.
Panel for computer sales at top. A maps menu showing computer shops near me. A Bestbuy link. Another panel for computer sales. Walmart, amazon, newegg. A wiki. And another sales panel.
Personal : small library of notebooks, I generally dont share these
Professionally : physical notebooks and Onenote books. Every time I join a new team I start a new notebook and when I leave I pass it to someone else if they want it. My Onenote files are publicly accessible to anyone.
My team runs a mission critical application nearly all of us were duped into supporting. Ops engineering turned into "process champion" and now I yell at people about ticket structure (bane of my existence) instead of diagnosing db performance issues (things I gleefully lose sleep over.) Now I question my passion for IT daily, fall asleep at lunch and wait for the day I do bad enough to be fired.
Its a bit like wikipedia, it doesnt look like much initially but going in with purpose shows you just how much more in depth they are. Examine also updates their research regularly, that alone puts them above "any old health site"
I use a DAP for all of my music and purchase most of it via bandcamp. I can barely buy music on iOS but I can (and still do) all of my library management, music purchasing and file management on a One Plus 3T using a usb c to micro sd dongle.
File management is so tricky and app centric on iOS so I dont think this will ever work.
I've been experiencing this for the last six months and unfortunately its soured my current gig (that I started six months ago now) such that I dread my work life. Almost the entirety of tech is no longer magical once I actually read the tfs cards.
Due to YT constantly changing video decryption functionality, ~4-5 times a year it breaks for multiple days. I fully expect it to be suddenly broken in a year or two.
Interesting bundling their services via the browser. Its a single point of entry vs Google (seemingly) access disjoint. Password management, notes, file transfer (and storage?) browse and secure connections through one browser is something I think Id want.