People still fall for obvious online scams, crypto bots and email phishing, and you think there aren't enough people won't fall for fake reviews? Amazon has great damage control, they'll most likely offer mad users deals they can't refuse to prevent them from writing a bad review. I've been offered same product or a close enough product for free when I complained to Amazon support.
Amazon isn't some startup that few bad news can take down anymore. They'll say they investigated themselves, make a pr statement that they banned thousands of fake accounts and people will eat it up. It can keep expanding in new markets and keep the bad reviews rolling in while some mad customers scream into the void.
Beeper sets a good premise. Talk to your friends without ever bugging them about hopping over to a completely new app. You might convert some, but not most.
There's a downside to E2EE on bridged chats but if that's not acceptable within your threat model then you wouldn't be using it in the first place.
Usually that means the instance serving the video might be having a problem. You can use a different one from the settings but that gets cumbersome. It really needs to show the instances in the video UI.
it's unlikely they are going to be able to bruteforce your 2FA codes in the duration of the class, so just change them back once you're done with the class?
or record the video showing the whole process. change the code, show the video you recorded before the change
Amazon only operates in 58 countries, so it's basically useless for everyone else. But the company they acquired (fakespot) seems to do more than amazon, but that still does not make it worth packaging it with the browser
Below, I’ve embedded some graphics created by display analyst Dylan Raga that illustrate how Ultra HDR works. Using version 9.1.098 of the Google Camera app extracted from a Pixel 8, I took various Ultra HDR photos in a nearby park. These photos were captured on a Pixel 6 Pro, which surprisingly supports saving photos in Ultra HDR just by sideloading the latest version of Google Camera.
Or they just want to keep the attention to Pixel product, any pixel. These little leaks doing rounds and rounds in tech sites mean more exposure to Pixels.
That's good. I don't believe in god.