Está más que demostrado a estas alturas que la plebe no sabe. Antes por último si querías vender neofascismo y neonazismo tenías que ponerles un iPod envuelto para regalo enfrente y se te abrían de piernas y de poto, ahora ni eso hace falta...
Pizzas las mejores son las del Melt, pero el ambiente es mucho mejor si vas a comer con la familia o con amigos en el Pizza Hut. Y comerse la pizza ahí es parte del encanto de una pizzería.
The CSS is literally openly served along with the website. One line change in the HTML (in allows you to make your own CSS for a site. There's a world of difference between that and "Google's new trusted web bullshit". And you know who sits much closer to Google than HTML and CSS?
The people who designed Gemini (and those who designed Gopher, and who did IRC, and...) have already gone to vast lengths explaining why it has to be redesigned from scratch, including new language and protocol. tl;dr: if you keep using current HTML, you have no way of preventing people from using eg.:
It's less a "what's happening" but more a "what's always has been". Mozilla gets recurrent payments from Google, I presume as a way to keep them just afloat enough to avoid antitrust law. Also, the Mozilla CEO gets a persistent raise in wages while Firefox sinks. Occam's Razor says golden parachute.
In a world that now has stronger cryptography, attestation and surveillance capabilities? I can assure you Round 2 would go vastly different. There would also not be a Round 3.
But that's just that — speak. Not any sort of contractual committment.
And honestly, I get it. Why would the CEO be interested in keeping the company open if they stop receiving their Google raises? Just torch the franchise and run, like others even pre-Elon have done before.
Who do you think the first / main Attesters are going to be with this proposals? Well, companies that have the mediums to do so and the captive audiences to precheck. Such as GAFAM of which Apple is part and founder of.
This. I'm much interested in Protonmail and Tuta, but until they can support SMTP / IMAP or have a publicly accessible bridge to operate with client-side mail, they're absolute nonstarters for me.
Same, but the trick is to force workplace to pay it and deal with it. During the three years I was freelancing I had four company phones at home and had to pay for none of them, other than battery rechargings (and that's when I ever brought them home; on weekends I just powered them off and left them in the garage).
Pero la gata te hace purrrr~ y te sirve de escaldasono.