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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)IL
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2 yr. ago

  • Samsung actually added Knox to their Android implementation a few months before iOS added Secure Enclave. I think Qualcomm had some sort of trusted execution environment around that time, too, if I recall correctly. And Google added Trusty to the AOSP two years ago. So it's already running on Android, and has been for ages.

    But I'm not convinced a TEE would be necessary for a device that doesn't run any third-party native code. Browser tab sandboxing is already pretty robust; I haven't heard of an escalation exploit being found in ages on any major JavaScript engine, meaning that the risk of data exfiltration or bootloader compromise are extremely remote, and would be much quicker (and less risky!) to patch via browser updates than firmware/OS updates.

    The only other reason I know of that you'd need a TEE is for DRM, and I'd be willing to wager most people who would want a FirefoxOS phone would actively prefer not to have that on their device.

  • Heritage Foundation: "We want him to be a neutron bomb"

    Trump: "I'm going to be a neutron bomb"

    Musk: "I'm up for neutron bombs!"

    CEOs: "Can you only neutron bomb some things?"

    Trump: "No."

    CEOs: "Eh, he probably doesn't mean it."

    Media: "Trump not going to be a neutron bomb, everyone says"

    Voters: "...eh? Sorry, is there an election or something?"

  • Honestly, I think the old FirefoxOS could do well these days. Literally everything an app can do can be done by a browser with a decent caching/local storage scheme. Slap a decent camera on that and it would be amazing.

  • I'm not at all trying to argue that things now are worse in general, for everyone than they've been during those time periods. I'm not even saying that it's as bad as it could possibly be across every metric. I'm just wondering if we've ever had this cyclone of so many things all compounding at once. Even the stuff that you mentioned, each of which was awful, was at least more or less sequential. The Civil War didn't happen during the Gilded Age, and the Great Depression wasn't concurrent with the runup to World War I. 2025 feels like the Great Depression + the Gilded Age + the assassination of Archduke Ferdinand + the Civil War + segregation + Asian-American internment camps, but instead of happening over the course of a hundred years, we're packing it all in to Thursday.

    It happened because people fought and died to make it happen.

    Yeah, but then we're right back to the public disinterest and economic risk, both of which make large-scale collective action a very difficult prospect (by design).

    EDIT: To be clear, I'm not trying to be a fatalist here. I'm trying to calibrate for the extreme level of danger that we're facing, from multiple corners, all at once.

  • we've been through way worse than this bullshit in this country, and we've usually come out of it stronger and wiser.

    I've been wondering about that myself. What events are you specifically pointing toward? I think the Great Depression and immediate aftermath are pretty close cousins to our current level of public disinterest and economic risk, and the 1890s-1910s are pretty comparable to the current level of deregulation and regulatory capture, and the run-up to the first World War is pretty similar to our risk of armed conflict, and the Civil War isn't too far off of our current level of political division...but have we ever had all of those things at once, plus a constitutional crisis?

  • There's also a complete rehash of the Wikipedia article about the game, its release and reception, and maybe even a slideshow of memes before you get to the "No confirmation" part. And then a list of all the times the developers have said, "yeah, if they want to do another one, we'd take their money."

  • The recipe I used actually suggested raisins in the cake and walnuts in the frosting. While I don't mind either on their own or in other things, carrot cake is supposed to be creamy and smooth. If I wanted crunch or chew, I'd choose...I dunno, german chocolate or something.

  • Just last week, someone left a note for me saying I'm a "goddess among mortals" for making a carrot cake without raisins.

    I'm an overweight 40-year-old man with a beard. She hadn't seen who made the cake, so she was just making a guess that the baker was a woman, but still. Funny experience.