Wouldn't the attacker have to be on the same network as the resolver for this to work? Or could it be triggered by a "dirty hostname"? Because in the former case, most home networks would not be at much risk.
admin
Not to mention things like Cloudflare, AWS, and GCP.
A few years ago some other nginx devs also split off to create the fork Angie. I wonder why they didn't join forces. My guess would be egos.
You're both right. In the long run it's going to hurt them, but very few companies strategise for the long run.
For me the default launcher would always first list "recommendations" to install Disney plus or other platforms, before showing content that I'm actually interested in.
I have since switched to a different launcher, one that automatically starts up plex as well, since that's all I use it for anyway.
That's okay, it's not blocked on the routers and phones of all the other people who let Facebook scan their phones with your address in it, or who post photos with you in it.
Make no mistake - Facebook has a profile on you. You just don't have the login to it.
Yeah, just goes to show that the AI hype may be peaking, it's not going away.
At least with Edge it's not disrupting the market by pushing an inferior rendering engine, like they did in the IE era. That by itself held the web back a good couple of years, and they were fined for abuse of their monopoly.
But at any rate, all of this is whataboutism - the issue is with Apple's abuse of their position right now.
I wouldn't be so sure. Depending on where you are in the world, there dozens of laws that might interfere. Ranging from publicity rights to slander, especially if the images are photorealistic (enough).
Cornholio
*kernel
By the time a law would be adopted, it probably will be. I wouldn't want to rely on the "kindness" of commercial entities as the sole protector of consumer welfare. We've seen how well that works with Google and Facebook.