Not necessarily. If you trust the code running on your device then there is no backdoor they could install on a server that would break e2ee. They would have to backdoor the client where the keys are.
I wouldn’t be surprised if the amount of power drawn overnight when a processor is in sleep mode ends up being less than the power it takes to boot the device.
The point is that this post is like highlighting an instance of Jews attacking a Nazi in 1930s Germany. Certainly not great, but also let’s make sure we keep the bigger picture in focus here. And that’s the tens of thousands of dead Palestinians murdered by the IDF.
Those are usually referred to as “the king’s courts”, and “court of law” specifically distinguishes that the court is based on law rather than the king.
I strongly disagree with this. In practice, supporting chrome does not imply supporting safari and vice versa. In particular, Safari is much, much slower about adopting new web technologies. Google basically implements support for anything they can think up, Apple waits for it become a ratified standard and then implements it only if they want to. Their JavaScript implementations are also completely different.
In that case it could still end up in a situation similar to weed, where it is legal according to states but not to the federal government. Especially for those states that legalized abortion access via constitutional amendment rather than a simple law.
If what you’re referring to is behavioral problems, the more obvious explanation to me is that as kids spend less and less time being physically active, they become more restless and feel under-stimulated when they have to sit in school all day.
What exactly does Signal have to offer if one already uses iMessage with contact key verification?