It’s also well known that so called anti-virus software is doing crazy shit on your machine and is actually opening it up for many exploits.
It’s also well known that so called anti-virus software is doing crazy shit on your machine and is actually opening it up for many exploits.
:(
What an absolute bullshit of an explanation. I hate this. Just be honest and say it’s not worth it.
For me, everything was disabled once I opened the dialog options. Legitimate interest was still enabled, but that’s compliant to the GDPR.
I’ve noticed that no ads are shown when you disable all tracking and reject cookies. Might be EU only though.
Where is the option to pay once? I can’t find it.
You don’t want the developer to earn any money?
So you literally need much more than a networked raspberry pi with a content hard drive, and Kodi installed anywhere.
But that’s the point I’m making. It’s absolutely fine that it’s not as simple as using a ready-made service. And we shouldn’t behave like it is, because that’s just not true.
And where does the content come from?
Even though many people suggest that, I don’t believe you can compare any off-the-shelf streaming service with a self-hosted Plex.
You have to find and download content to your Plex. You don’t get recommendations. You don’t get a built-in interface on your smart TV. You have to deal with network configuration, VPN, private trackers, seeding ratios etc.
How on earth is that comparable to pressing the Netflix button on your TV and selecting a recommended show? Even my boomer parents managed to do this on their own.
Reminder that almost every single one of us is part of the world’s richest 10%.
This article is from 2020.
It’s available on GitHub: https://github.com/mozilla-mobile/firefox-android/releases
Use Obtainium to keep it up-to-date automatically.
I don’t think that’s possible. But to prevent an XY problem: what do you want to achieve? Maybe it’s enough to simply disable the history, or delete cookies when you exit a page, or use Firefox Focus as your default browser.
This is a good question and a valid concern. However, I wonder if the app really makes in worse then it’s already is. GitHub has no way to share checksums with the builds. The only way to do that is to upload a checksum file alongside the binary. But if an attacker is able to upload/replace a malicious binary, they would be able to replace its checksum file as well. So you wouldn’t be able to recognize this anyway, even when downloading it GitHub, would you?
Using the equipment incorrectly.
That’s impossible. The Play Store app doesn’t care about Sync’s cache. That was simply coincidence.
Cleaning the Play Store app’s cache on the other hand might help.