A nonprofit I help out just moved from Slack to Discord for a very simple reason: Slack pricing was too expensive, and as the amount of people increased, the price continues to climb. Discord is free
Just being owned by an offshore company doesn't mean that they still can't be infiltrated. But as you pointed out, just because Company A creates an app does not mean that Company B can't come in later to take control.
The alarming extent of US-affiliated signals intelligence collection is well-documented, but in the case of Threema it's largely inconsequential; you can still purchase the license for it anonymously, optionally build from source, and actively resist traffic analysis when using it.
That is to say: it allows a determined party to largely remain anonymous even in the face of upstream provider's compromise.
Where can I learn more about hardware acceleration of WebP on mobile OSes? I haven’t yet come across a resource that confirms this is actually the case. I know it should theoretically be possible using the VP8 hardware decoders but I thought those were expensive to warm up just for images
It's somewhat popular for piracy, when you know that your site could never pass the Apple/Google store reviews. I've seen it with, for example, manga aggregators
I disagree regarding the choice of codec. Currently, I have no issues receiving, saving, and viewing H265 streams.
Any modern CPU/GPU can handle them natively (I use a 2018 Intel CPU w/ QSV), any modern desktop or mobile device (I use both Android and iOS) can stream it, and the recorded video takes up less space. What are you using that requires transcoding?
If like myself you're a Linux and Firefox and Android user, H.265 support is extremely lacking; you're probably ok on a modern Android, but you'll not be able to view any of the streams or do scrubbing etc on desktop in Firefox, nothing video related is going to work in the Frigate UI, you won't be able to preview videos etc and will have to download them and use VLC. This might not sound like an issue, but it's a huge pain in the arse if you actually want to use it day to day.
All in, H.265 is unsuitable if you use a specific set of software/tools that is quite a common combination; Linux/Firefox/Android.
The original commenter is correct, if you're one of these people like myself, avoid H.265 like the plague until support is better and be sure to buy cameras that also support H.264.
For Hikvision sourced cameras, previews and exports work, but you can't play clips without transcoding. Unfortunately I haven't found a transcoding option that doesn't completely swamp my CPU (with 3 cameras) so I'm living without ability to play clips right now.
This would break way too many websites to be feasible. And if implemented, would be something requested on so many sites that users would learn to automatically say yes which would weaken the power of permission prompts in general.
For example, almost every major Japanese book/comic site uses canvas in their e-reader
The best solution would be if canvas only allowed displaying pixels on the page but not drawing (meaning you need to bring your own drawing library) so that it would be unusable for fingerprinting.
Stripe also has a version of this called “Link”, which uses SMS authentication. Based on Stripe data on multiple platforms I have access to, quite a high percentage of people use it, probably due to how hard it’s pushed by the UI when adding a payment method
reply