Well, given that that doesn’t explicitly mention the tab bar, and that my quote does, I think you can still hold out hope that it will not be visible :)
Well, given that that doesn’t explicitly mention the tab bar, and that my quote does, I think you can still hold out hope that it will not be visible :)
I noticed there had been a few Germans caught by our immigration crooks,
One question there is: why are we noticing now? Do these stories just make the news more easily considering waves generally recent events? Or does it actually happen more often?
I also heard that modern mines had some precautions as well, such as getting deactivated after a while?
No worries! Thanks for updating your comment :)
I also heard that modern mines had some precautions as well, such as getting deactivated after a while?
I also heard that modern mines had some precautions as well, such as getting deactivated after a while?
If you think you know what happened or the context, you probably don’t. Please don’t make assumptions. Thank you.
Someone might want to check that, because IIRC it was someone else’s alter ego.
Where does it say “including the tabbar”? I even see the following in the Connect post:
No tabs or bookmarks bar by default, but these could be enabled in web app preferences
It’s not even finished yet, who knows what will happen to the tab bar.
Edit: in fact, looks like they explicitly said that it wouldn’t be included.
I have yet to see the government actually do something about this (because it’s costly), but I don’t see why Wilders in particular would be against this? This seems totally unrelated to his key issues.
No worries, thanks again!
Which Mozilla projects started out as free and are now non-free, i.e. no longer under an open source (or even viral open source) licence?
It was collapsed for me at first, and buried under a lot of other comments, but a workaround is mentioned here. Unfortunately, that didn’t seem to work for me, but deleting the Flatpak and deleting all associated data, and then reinstalling it, I think did the trick.
Although it does now show this warning, which doesn’t sound great.
Edit: actually, I think that was the reason I concluded the first workaround didn’t work, but looking at that URL, this might just have been introduced in Firefox 128, which is newer than the old version of Tor was based on. So it looks like both worked.
So… How do we do we’re running an outdated version, and what is the fix that requires manual intervention?
I mean, there’s always the source code. If we just assume everyone has it in for us regardless of whether we have anything to indicate that that is actually happening, then of course we’re going to find that everyone has it in for us.
I don’t know what “all of them” means, but e.g. Facebook and Google do a whole lot more than that. They’ll tell thousands of companies “here’s someone that probably lives around here, is about this age, this gender, has these hobbies, etc. - who wants to advertise to them?”
At that point, there’s not much difference between that, and knowing that that “is” you. They know a lot about you (i.e. you specifically), and use that to influence what you see and who can hear what you say.
So aggregated data like “x users have seen this ad, y users have clicked it”, but not “this person has clicked the ad and likes baseball”?
Steelmanning their point, they might not be saying that all this is orchestrated by some third party (e.g. Russia), but that they are benefiting from it.
To which I’d say: unfortunately, the same holds true for the alternative.
I feel like many of the horizontally-striped ones would make good T-shirts at least. Not necessarily stylish, of course, but nothing egregious.