It’s still a proposal. Nothing concrete yet. But from the looks of it, you can’t play such games since it’s cryptographically verified.
First they established a new standard for extensions that makes it harder for adblockers to work in chrome, that’s manifest v3.
And now they want establish cryptographic verification of the environment so that you can’t have a custom environment in your browser, like having adblockers. Similar to how DRM works.
As long as average Joe uses chrome, we’re doomed.
It’s all about the economics. Is your time more valuable than that wasted by the ads?
If you’re watching YouTube 10 minutes a day, then it doesn’t make sense for you. Cost/benefit analysis should be done.
That’s an overkill and doesn’t give any extra security. Multiple accounts is more reasonable.
Here’s a crazy idea…
Why not use another Vaultwarden account? :D
The Linux community doesn’t understand what “just works” really means.
Whether windows or mac, I plug my machine to the docking station, and it just works.
With Linux, every day a different problem. Out of the blue, screens just stop working. Resolutions change. Every restart different behavior. Zero consistency.
I’m not 17 anymore… I don’t have the time to keep tweaking. I need to be productive.
So what do I do? I SSH to a Linux machine whose desktop environment I don’t wanna see, and code remotely. Most productive setting.
You asked. Here’s the answer.
This is the first time I ever hear of Usenet… read a little… but honestly sounds freakishly scary… torrents are anyway filled with malware… and now we have to trust a centralized source for files?
Do clients that use Usenet verify public torrent file hashes? How is security handled such that I know the files aren’t infected compared to whatever the same torrent offers?