Seems I was confused about it being Gboard. It's one of those suggestion lines that pop up over the keyboard, but apparently it's a separate service.
simon
Thank you! This must be it.
I don't have message content in my notifications, so I don't think it can read any data from there. Maybe Signal just supplies it to this service directly?
Cool! How do you make these?
How does ability to detect more faces relate to mental health? It doesn't seem like something negative.
Is it because the training/use needs to happen within a single datacenter? Or are they saying that there are not enough data center capacity in total in the world to meet the demand?
Thanks for sharing. I can definitely see how life can be better in a richer and more progressive place. I guess a major factor for choosing where to live should be whether people there are hopeful for the future.
Just curious, why do you prefer those countries over Japan? Anything lacking there?
If I try to do the threat modeling, I guess I'm seeing three levels:
- Intelligence agencies. They probably have access to all possible data about you. Don't make them your enemy. Hopefully they never turn evil in your country.
- Large technology companies. They make the infrastructure like phone operating systems, stuff that you can't get around on the modern internet like Cloudflare, etc. They can be affected a little bit with legislation like the GDPR but only to a matter of degrees. But at least they have reasonably good security so you don't fully lose control of your data. The worst thing they will do to you is to try to convince you to buy stuff, which isn't all that bad.
- Smaller or non -tech companies that just are not competent enough to keep your data secure. They will use dependencies that spy on you, like Google Analytics or android app creation frameworks that inject location tracking. An online pharmacy that is using Facebook scripts and thus shares all your medical purchases with Facebook or elsewhere. A lot of this would be illegal but it is hard to find out and enforce the law about, and it's like a whack a mole game. It's hard to know where your data goes and it is probably being sold to whoever wants to pay. For example, local police buying location data from data brokers (worth double checking but I think this actually happens). Since there is no limit to who can access the data, this is more worrying. But for these things, you kind of have the big tech companies on your side. Browsers and phones tend to have built in tracker blocking these days. And you yourself can choose to be careful about what software you run from this category.
My point is that we should be clear about why we are concerned about the future. Who is the threat and how could they use your data against you? Breaking it down and pointing to a clear harm will help people around you understand why you are concerned.
Firefox for Android has always worked great for me. I prefer it because I can install the same privacy plugins as for desktop. And they also have Firefox Focus is also great.
Great, you have both back and leg exercises there then, with leg raise and chest flies. I'm wondering if it also allows leg curl, so you can train the other side of the thigh also.
You might want to add in bodyweight exercises in your routine to get a full body exercise. Like plank or situps for core, which I don't see any way to train with the machine.
Looks like it doesn't have any way to train legs so you should probably get something extra for that. Legs are hard to train with just bodyweight because the muscles are too strong and don't get exhausted from just the weight of your body.
Can you pull the handles in the middle towards you in a rowing motion, or is it just for pushing? If not, you need some way to train your back also. Maybe back extension would work as a bodyweight exercise.
I haven't found something that has good support for swiping words. Anysoft Keyboard gets too many words wrong.
If I thought Google was actually collecting what I type, I would put up with typing manually on another keyboard. But that kind of data collection without consent is illegal in the EU. I'd put the risk of Google breaking the law here at less than 10%, which is tolerable.