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needs <map> tags


dang, that is slick! (Apple M1 Macbook Air)



Not sure why this isn't upvoted higher. I thought the infographic on that page explained it pretty clearly, step-by-step.


I listened to a very good 'In Our Time' podcast episode about Paul Dirac recently: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000fw0p



Heya, I really like it :) Like the top comment currently though I have a hard time with the font. Everything else seems great!


Title of the post is not right, the author issued a (technically important) correction[1]:

> Brief correction: Cookies seem to get removed and re-created immediately. At least the cookie content and creation date seems to change. Nonetheless: After hitting the "remove all" button you still don't end up with an empty cookie jar.

[1]: https://twitter.com/ctavan/status/1044543955457773573


I've used YAML for years, and yeah, there's a lot of warts, but I love it for small(ish) manually edited configuration files. I generally keep it simple and it works.


The GDPR explicitly does not set out to specify implementation details because of the reasons here: https://gdpr-info.eu/recitals/no-15/ (Technology neutrality)


Hi John, just an FYI: if you have Facebook Messenger installed on your phone, you are probably giving Facebook a lot more data than you think.


Can you provide any additional detail about that? I can’t tell if you’re referring to FB mining the contents of the messages, or the app doing unscrupulous things in the background.


The NSA says they only monitor communication metadata. But that's already a lot of information. Let's imagine a scenario where FB can't read your messages, so it doesn't know what you talk about. But if you talk to people who are mostly Trump critics according to their Facebook activity, Facebook can probably categorize you as a liberal. If you added a new friend of the appropriate gender for dating, and your communication intensifies, Facebook can probably guess what's going on. If it intensified and goes quiet some evenings (predominantly weekend evenings), well, guess who's seeing each other (each guess come with probability percentages).


The latter. I don't have specific examples in mind, just that if you do not trust a company's data collection policies, the collection capabilities of an installed program are much greater than when viewed through a web browser. See [1] for an example from a few of years ago.

[1]: https://gizmodo.com/facebooks-messenger-app-logs-way-more-da...


Facebook Messenger on Android can read call log


Can't you avoid this (on recent Android versions at least) by disabling all permissions? That's what I did.

(I'm sure they're still analyzing the messages I send and how I interact with the app, of course.)


Hello,

Do you know if it's the same for WhatsApp?

When you think about it, it's kind of alarming that FB, Messenger, WhatsApp and Instagram are all owned by the same company. I can't even imagine the amount of data they have about us.


Does the same hold true for WhatsApp?


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