That's a super tenuous connection. Having their name listed as a partner of a cyber alliance doesnt mean much.
Quad9 is entirely subject to Swiss privacy law, and the Swiss government extends that protection of the law to Quad9's users throughout the world, regardless of citizenship or country of residence
They are not at all subject to City of London laws.
I use SugarCRM when I need a quick and dirty CRM. There are various open source forks. Its fairly easy to integrate. There are a few other FOSS CRM options, too. Never tried them but OnlyOffice has one, GNU Enterprise, SuiteCRM, Dolibarr, etc
Banks in the US use Open Banking APIs too, they won't open it up for the public to use, though. Every company, not just banks, wants us to have their app on our phone.
I use Joplin (hosted on my home Nextcloud server) and its very good, so far. I haven't had it long. Nextcloud also has a native Notes app that is decent but not very featureful. Joplin works well for me, as I already had a Nextcloud instance.
Be aware that powerful UV flashlights (especially the no-name Chinese ones) can also damage your eyes quickly without you noticing. Better ones will come with protective glasses.
My (non-tesla) vehicle can tell when the sensors are impaired by frost or mud or whatever. It flashes a warning on my dash and disables the lane-keeping and/or collision detection until next startup. Does Tesla not do that?
"The flaw exists in the processing of user-supplied splash screen during system boot, which can be exploited by an attacker who has physical access to the device," according to the notification, which noted that an updated version is available. "By supplying a malicious splash screen, the attacker can cause a denial-of-service attack or execute arbitrary code in the UEFI DXE phase, bypassing the Secure Boot mechanism and compromising the system integrity."
Sure, but physical access is already no bueno.
I wonder whether this could also be exploited remotely. IIRC, my mainboard vendor provides software to update the boot logo from within the OS. I don't think it requires any physical interaction. It does require admin rights tho.
My vehicle can do almost all the same stuff as "autopilot" but it turns the autosteering and cruise off if I dont touch the wheel every 30 seconds. Its all the same types of sensors,etc. And mine isn't even a luxury brand. Just the higher end trim package of a budget vehicle.
edit: actually, it's just 10 seconds before the warning and another 5 or so before it disables lane-keeping
Thirded. June of 2020, the cheap clippers were already all sold out, so I bought a really nice set of clippers at an inflated price. But since I used to pay about $20 every month for a haircut, they paid for themselves fast. And now every time my partner cuts my hair, its like money going into pur pocket.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simple_file_verification