[...] no AT&T customer is ever 'forced' to agree to arbitration [...]
[...] no one 'forces' them to obtain AT&T wireless service, DirecTV programming, or other products and services.
So basically, you only qualify as a customer if you do use products or services (that require agreement), but no customer is ever forced? I fail to see the logic here.
The same supercomputer center has 2 redundant clusters dedicated to meteo forecasts, yes: http://www.cscs.ch/computers/k... And yes, the forecasts are fancy.
I do not like paywalls online and find them ineffective (there are alternative sources for most things).
I do, however, appreciate when the content is essentially free for everyone but is supported by voluntary donations. Take Dwarf Fortress as an example.
I understand it doesn't work out for everyone, but when it does, it's the best situation.
GitHub for private repos. Adobe CC photography bundle (PS + LR). Dropbox for convenient cloud storage. Spotify for my music needs (and if I do buy music, I tend to only do so through Bandcamp). The Old Reader to help me drown in the hundreds of feeds I follow.
One VPS provider for random small needs + domain fees. One VPN provider for peace of mind in some situations.
And many donations to content creators. Mostly with Patreon. I'd consider that subscriptions.
I wish YouTube Red as available in my country; I would pay it just for the ad-free experience where I know content creators are still compensated.
Anecdotal evidence, as a Chrome Web Store developer I was notified on Oct 17 that free CWS items are now available in Cuba. I assume paid items aren't because there is no payment processing yet.
So at least Google is lifting sanctions-induced embargo.
The current Cloudflare CAPTCHA simply places a cookie allowing you to access the website. Since Cloudflare controls the origins, it could currently correlate user sessions across multiple circuits using these cookies. This is a gap in the Tor Browser threat model- the design explicitly ignores linking within a session by malicious first parties, but Cloudflare has effectively first-party control over a large proportion of the web.
Our design is an improvement over this state of affairs. Since the CAPTCHA service only sees blinded nonces, Cloudflare cannot link a CAPTCHA solution session to a given redemption request. Since each token is used only once, in contrast to a cookie, the tokens themselves cannot be used to link requests.
PGP has message integrity checks.
When operating on files, PGP simply refuses to decrypt malformed (tampered) messages.
However, when invoked to process as a pipe, it will spit out the plaintext, then a warning.
Even though the client is at fault for ignoring the warning, arguably, PGP should be consistent and spew out only the warning.
Accessing the Secure Processor is done through a vendor supplied driver that is digitally signed.
I think this implies that there is an existing AMD driver that allows the attack.
I assume the system remains under warranty if Dell does it.
[...] no AT&T customer is ever 'forced' to agree to arbitration [...]
[...] no one 'forces' them to obtain AT&T wireless service, DirecTV programming, or other products and services.
So basically, you only qualify as a customer if you do use products or services (that require agreement), but no customer is ever forced? I fail to see the logic here.
The same supercomputer center has 2 redundant clusters dedicated to meteo forecasts, yes: http://www.cscs.ch/computers/k...
And yes, the forecasts are fancy.
Not quite. Paying for GitHub's value-added services like the interface, issue tracking, etc.
Yes, functionally one can replicate it with other services. I'm happy with GitHub's offer though.
I do not like paywalls online and find them ineffective (there are alternative sources for most things).
I do, however, appreciate when the content is essentially free for everyone but is supported by voluntary donations. Take Dwarf Fortress as an example.
I understand it doesn't work out for everyone, but when it does, it's the best situation.
GitHub for private repos.
Adobe CC photography bundle (PS + LR).
Dropbox for convenient cloud storage.
Spotify for my music needs (and if I do buy music, I tend to only do so through Bandcamp).
The Old Reader to help me drown in the hundreds of feeds I follow.
One VPS provider for random small needs + domain fees.
One VPN provider for peace of mind in some situations.
And many donations to content creators. Mostly with Patreon. I'd consider that subscriptions.
I wish YouTube Red as available in my country; I would pay it just for the ad-free experience where I know content creators are still compensated.
No, but a 4-year boy may not know that, and presumably you need to unlock the phone for Siri to respond to activation command.
The Old Reader. Liked it well enough to become the maintainer of their Chrome extension.
A failure of one or more of defendants’ safety systems or devices had taken place, causing Wanda’s death.
That's it. That's all this lawsuit is about, faulty failsafes on industrial equipment that lead to an accident. Probably with merit.
But sure, call it "rogue robots" and "killing"...
Actually scratch that, the release version already contains the support for KDBX 4 / ChaCha20 / Argon2.
They updated the system, but it should not come in effect for existing databases unless you specifically change it yourself.
As for Android clients that can work with new encryption, check out Keepass2Android beta version.
Even though text messaging isn't the main feature of Skype, still not having any ability to search for text in conversation is crippling.
As far as I remember, the oldest originally-web comic still running is Piled Higher and Deeper with October 27, 1997 launch.
Well they just did, considering Kaby Lake is backwards compatible with Z170 chipset motherboards.
Have you tried googling "find my phone" while logged in to the same Google account as the phone?
Canonically, element 115 is Elerium...
A bit of a dupe, it was reported before on /. though it was citing different sources.
Anecdotal evidence, as a Chrome Web Store developer I was notified on Oct 17 that free CWS items are now available in Cuba. I assume paid items aren't because there is no payment processing yet.
So at least Google is lifting sanctions-induced embargo.
So those smartwatches are useful for something.
This is basically parody of "obligatory XKCD" comments when there are relevant XKCD comics.
Self-Driving Car Ethics
Very much yes.
To be specific, let me quote the spec:
The current Cloudflare CAPTCHA simply places a cookie allowing you to access the website. Since Cloudflare controls the origins, it could currently correlate user sessions across multiple circuits using these cookies. This is a gap in the Tor Browser threat model- the design explicitly ignores linking within a session by malicious first parties, but Cloudflare has effectively first-party control over a large proportion of the web.
Our design is an improvement over this state of affairs. Since the CAPTCHA service only sees blinded nonces, Cloudflare cannot link a CAPTCHA solution session to a given redemption request. Since each token is used only once, in contrast to a cookie, the tokens themselves cannot be used to link requests.