Neckbeards love to pretend open source magically has no security vulnerabilities
Who does? Feels like you’re just talking about inexperienced “btw i use arch” kinda skiddies
Neckbeards love to pretend open source magically has no security vulnerabilities
Who does? Feels like you’re just talking about inexperienced “btw i use arch” kinda skiddies
Don’t e.g. alarm apps not work after that until you unlock your phone since the device data decryption keys weren’t kept in RAM after rebooting? I have that feature off since I don’t want that to happen. Afaik AOSP has added that to make installing updates more seamless, but it’d be useful for this too. (And since Samsung usually sucks at improving their already self-made stuff to align with AOSP, like Virtual A/B updates, I’m just assuming this)
Neither on Apple devices though? There aren’t many exploits to “jailbreak” Android phones.
“Just”
AOSP is fully Apache-2.0 licensed except for the Linux kernel, so only their kernel changes would have to be. It’s also an important reason why Android was/is so successful.
I feel like most people would rather use shady, free VPNs instead. There’ll probably be an increase in them too
I can use the IzzyOnDroid repo with the regular F-Droid app, am I missing out on or doing anything wrong?
Man that rule is such bullcrap. Imagine a photo editor that only allowed you to edit your own pictures and only those matching the app’s content rating.
As someone who’s never used a desktop like that before, that looks both cool and horrible af lol
I have a tiny archive of my own consisting of one 1 TB and one 2 TB USB HDDs by different vendors. Whenever I want to save something, I put it on both. Btrfs snapshots make that really easy.
For a better Linux experience for example (Wayland). Also it apparently has some added accessibility improvements too
If you’re new to it, maybe check out Katawa Shoujo: Re-Engineered. Same story but ported to be more modern under-the-hood. Apparently there’s even a web version thanks to Wasm!
Does that make sense in terms of DMCA and yuzu tho? youtube-dl got taken down for DMCA reasons on GitHub a while ago, while that was pretty much just bs. I haven’t looked too much into what yuzu does, but it seems like it’s just an emulator without any tools you’d need to also get it to run, to get the game data and some Switch (DRM?) keys. That’s comparable to browser cookies being used by youtube-dl to download websites’ media.
Also (to me) it more looks like the yuzu devs themselves made stupid choices to promote piracy, not really including the actual app code though
I found more info: Microsoft SQL Server Engine already does hot patching and I guess the same way will be used in other MS apps: https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/t5/Azure-SQL-Database/Hot-Patching-SQL-Server-Engine-in-Azure-SQL-Database/ba-p/849700
So according to the official page on Hotpatching (without any trackers like in the article), this reminds me of kpatch. I guess Microsoft really wants to spend the effort of making that work. Isn’t kpatch not really supported (without $$$) by many larger distros since it’s prone to break easily?
Technically, but it’s safer to reboot nonetheless: https://fedoramagazine.org/offline-updates-and-fedora-35/
Whenever I get files in higher quality than you’d normally get from e.g. YouTube Music or Spotify. Currently I’m at a just 9.2 GiB library, but whatever, I don’t listen to music too often anyway
How would an AOSP fork help with an app not using the notifications API correctly? Just magically rewrite the app?