

No it cannot. E2EE = end to end encrypted. If it can be decrypted in transit then it’s not E2EE.
No it cannot. E2EE = end to end encrypted. If it can be decrypted in transit then it’s not E2EE.
I mean it’s in the name. A message containing media and not text is simply not a text message. Many people use them incorrectly but it’s literally in the name.
RCS is (supposedly) E2EE so keys are stored locally.
The Leaf S+ is the base model, with a 75 kWh long-range battery and a range of 303 miles (487 km)—it will cost $29,990 when it goes on sale this fall.
Sold.
That goes for the vast majority of petitions in general.
MMS is not a text message, it’s a media message (that’s what the M stands for).
Yes, RCS chats are encrypted (supposedly)
The Steam Deck was never supposed to be a powerhouse. It was intended to be extremely high efficiency and long-lasting and to this day no one competes with them on that. Nor do they compete on peripherals or cost effectiveness.
We won’t see another Steam Deck soon, and I think that’s a good thing. Gives developers a hardware target for their games.
They can block network traffic all they want, they still have no legal mechanism to enforce a fine.
How do you suppose they’re going to use network infrastructure to impose fines?
Great, they don’t operate in the UK either.
No, I answered it directly.
The EU can publish all the laws and articles they want. They have no authority to enforce them.
Let me know when they figure out how to make their cameras work without a CCP account.
Yes, I’ve just explained this. The achievement is being the go-to place for petitions.
Good thing no one was talking about that. We were talking about freedom of speech.
That’s not how human rights work. Either they’re for everyone or they’re for no one.
It doesn’t matter where they “serve traffic”. They do not operate in the EU and thus are not subject to EU law.
Anytime I see a petition for anything, it’s usually hosted there.
Unfortunately ours was sunset by Biden some years ago.
SimpleX is not perfect but they do get something very right: Anyone who contacts you needs an invitation. You can make your invitation public and then rotate it periodically such that it loses all value to databrokers. You can choose to make that invitation anonymous, as can your senders.
HomeAssistant is the only one I’m aware of.