Text fragment linking already works in the latest version of Firefox, although you'll need to install an extension like this one to create links.
XLE
I hesitantly wonder if something like Perplexity might actually be the future of search engines. It seems relatively capable of correctly interpreting search queries full of half-remembered thoughts and potentially inaccurate text into salient results. I disregard the guestimations it makes about the links it provides (of course) but the couple of times I tried it out this way, it seemed to work better than Google.
I also wonder how much energy it requires compared to whatever trash Google returns.
Considering Google has put effort into intentionally worsening its own product, it makes sense that their chapel alternative would be something people just use.
PieFed has a way to keep votes (more) private. From 11 months ago:
There was a widely held belief that votes should be private yet it was repeatedly pointed out that a quick visit to an Mbin instance was enough to see all the upvotes and that Lemmy admins already have a quick and easy UI for upvotes and downvotes (with predictable results).
Vote privacy may be especially important because it's really easy for a malicious server to get set up, unbeknownst to anybody else, and just pull vote data that other servers freely provide.
So Cloudflare's business model is openly the same as a corrupt security guard, somebody who promises to protect your stuff unless they get paid well enough?
I don't watch network TV either, but if I had to put up with ads at all, it would be on the device that I watch and not vice versa.
That's terrifying.
As an example, they list a printer detecting motion nearby.
And the AI Company Man told me I needed to scan my face into an orb to do this! At least they used the word "governance" a bit and offered me a pittance for the brave new opportunity.
There seems to be something a little... off here. VP looks like it's a tech demo for a patent held by another company.
The new VPN service is operated by the American company VP.NET LLC, which in turn is owned by TCP IP Inc
And TCP IP (a terrible name for people who want to look it up) is exclusively proud of owning a patent it thinks is worth a lot of money. From its site:
We own the intellectual property that enables hardware-guaranteed network privacy—addressing a critical market gap worth $562 billion by 2032.
To me, it sounds like the CEO is trying to sell the company itself as a product to a larger investor. And that other privacy considerations, like jurisdiction, never factored into this.
Then I got to this part of the article, which seems to confirm those suspicions.
The idea to use SGX as a privacy shield comes from Andrew Lee, the chief privacy architect at VP.net. As the founder of Private Internet Access, which he sold to Kape a few years ago, Lee has a long history in the VPN space. However, he believes this new concept is a breakthrough.
So this company is run by somebody who sold out before.
And you personally believe the people manipulating Trump have names like...
So the people you were actually referring to were...
I'm surprised this article doesn't mention privacytests.org by name, but it reaches a conclusion that may as well:
Thankfully there's a good recommendation in the very next paragraph for all things (messaging apps, browsers, etc):
Also: shots fired at XMPP throughout, as the poor protocol limps along trying desperately to catch up to the encryption baseline that was set over a decade ago by the first versions of Signal.
Why OMEMO is "bad" is indirectly answered earlier:
Similar discussions have skewered the federated Delta Chat for having an even worse version of this issue.