

Step one: don’t publish screenshots of your credentials on the web!
Never Use Text Pixelation To Redact Sensitive Information:
Let’s Enhance: A Deep Learning Approach to Extreme Deblurring of Text Images:
Step one: don’t publish screenshots of your credentials on the web!
Never Use Text Pixelation To Redact Sensitive Information:
Let’s Enhance: A Deep Learning Approach to Extreme Deblurring of Text Images:
Tl;dr: TSMC
Whittaker’s phrasing is ambiguous. Could be read as expressing one of a number of things:
It’s difficult to know without a better understanding of Whittaker’s position on the various matters at hand, so I don’t know.
What ideally I’d like is some sort of good encrypted email […], which can achieve decent Android integration. Proton apps are pretty useless to that effect […]
Don’t need provider-specific apps if their services use standard protocols:
Anyone can now provide that service. Why pay OpenAI when you can pay a different service who is cheaper or provides a service more aligned with your needs or ethics or legal requirements?
relayhost
configured with the details of your externally hosted SMTP server.There’s nothing unusual or tricky about any of this arrangement.
(I have never used their commercial offering).
Jitsi works really well, and the developers seem to have made an effort to have it work well on any platform, even mobile browsers and PSTN. I’ve always found it the lowest friction teleconferencing method for all types of users.
It’s self-hostable, integrates with SIP, and 8x8’s commercial offering mentions HIPAA, BAA and GDPR.
Flows nicely, but it’s an inaccurate collage of plot elements.
Migadu is a decent option if you don’t want to self-host.
It’s no use. “VPN” means gateway/MITM service, just like “crypto” means digital tulip mania.
The article does not explain the primary design purpose of a VPN – providing an encrypted tunnel into or between two private subnets.
For example, your home subnet is typically all 192.168.nnn.nnn addresses – a class of addresses which the wider internet does not route, and which your router/modem does not allow the wider internet to access unless explicitly permitted.
Say you have a NAS on your home network, and you want to access it from your laptop while at a cafe; you could set up a VPN between your laptop and your home router, and it can make your home network appear as your local network to your laptop, giving you access to your NAS.
Or between two office locations of a business – their database servers, accounting systems, printers, etc can all be freely accessible between offices without being exposed to the wider internet.
So it sounds like an ID will not be a requirement.
Sure, but gov ID is permitted as an option if another non-ID option is also available.
Simply choose between submitting your government ID or, say, switch on your front facing camera so we can perform some digital phrenology to determine your eligibility.
The ban and age verification requirements apply to pretty much all services which allow communication of information between people, unless an exemption is granted by the minister.
There is no legislated exemption for instant messaging, SMS, email, email lists, chat rooms, forums, blogs, voice calls, etc.
It’s a wildly broadly applicable piece of legislation that seems ripe to be abused in the future, just like we’ve seen with anti-terror and anti-hate-symbol legislation.
From 63C (1) of the legislation:
For the purposes of this Act, age-restricted social media platform means:
- a) an electronic service that satisfies the following conditions:
- i) the sole purpose, or a significant purpose, of the service is to enable online social interaction between 2 or more end-users;
- ii) the service allows end-users to link to, or interact with, some or all of the other end-users;
- iii) the service allows end-users to post material on the service;
- iv) such other conditions (if any) as are set out in the legislative rules; or
- b) an electronic service specified in the legislative rules; but does not include a service mentioned in subsection (6).
Here’s all the detail of what the bill is and the concerns raised in parliament.
You’re all still suckling at the opium teat of corporate media, whether via torrent or not.