It’s a white horse, OP’s spell checking failed a few times
It’s a white horse, OP’s spell checking failed a few times
By that analogy they’re not even putting crap on your plate, they’re putting stickers on your food telling you to try other food. I don’t want stickers on my food even if they’re advertising something I might like 😭
I usually (but not often enough tbh) refer to owasp documentation, like this one https://cheatsheetseries.owasp.org/cheatsheets/Cryptographic_Storage_Cheat_Sheet.html They basically say elliptic curves for asymmetric encryption, or RSA with a key of at least 2048 bits
Thanks!
Got any links to resources you used / recommend for this / further reading?
If you do that I’d be very interested to see the results! Especially things like night sight, my gf’s camera is as night blind as she is 😅
These days gaming on linux is pretty good, lots of games run better than on windows. Typically the only thing that doesn’t work (on release, often afterwards it gets fine) is (shitty) DRM/anticheat like denuvo.
Not OP but interested in both privacy and high-tech features. My current (stock) pixel 4a device has a worse camera than many other phones, but the software compensates a lot, netting better picture quality overall very often. I’m wondering how much of that is lost when using graphene instead of stock android, do you know?
Similarly with the latest gen pixels having AI features built in, I’m assuming much of that is software that’s not as easily installed somewhere else…
I also caved for a pixel (4a) for my last phone, it still has Google’s bloatware (can’t remove youtube music app for example), but at least it doesn’t have Samsung’s bloatware in addition.
Still interested where this thread goes in other options though, as it’s getting worse in battery life and I’m also looking out for something new.
All of these are intentionally inverted
I’d wager most, if not all of them. Ideally you’d have a program you want to use because it’s promising, but instead you keep returning to whatever you used before that because certain use cases aren’t handled well (or at all).