Its highly unlikely that any of those 4 people are DOJ employees. More likely 4 traders that have been interviewed and confirmed as much to the journalist.
You might need them to reverse or refund the transaction with some payment gateways. Or if you are going to settle the funds at a time after authorization when shipping
The screenshot looks like the IDE is Visual Studio Code, but I only see instructions for setup with IntelliJ and Android Studio (Is that Android Studio? I've never used that before)
Ah sorry, I meant the code sample under the “Modern, reactive framework” heading. Search for “class CounterState”.
As for editors, as you note, the instructions focus on IntelliJ/Android Studio, since that’s where the team has put most work, but there’s good support for VS Code (which I believe is what’s in the screenshot). For those who prefer something more minimal, you can find Dart support for vim and emacs too.
HBO and pretty much any major Network all have iOS apps.
HLS streaming can be protected, you can encrypt the chunks and decrypt on the player. Ironically enough for my previous job I built a HLS prototype solution that did exactly this... in the Flash Player.
Did you find that approach to be effective at all?
If you are decrypting on the player then the decryption key must be on the clients device. What is to stop them grabbing the key from memory and ripping the stream anyway?
Yeah, it was just a prototype to protect live video streaming on Android devices... Performance was pretty bad and so the frame rate was pretty low. I think it would work decently for desktop Flash. JW Player have a HLS plugin for Flash which is pretty good, a lot more fleshed out than my prototype ended up being.
I can see that that could work on a locked down iOS device but a rooted android phone would surely be able to access to manifest file and make a copy of the keys and stream contents.
After all you only need one device to copy the stream and re-stream DRM free to others.
Its neither, feedback supplied to the "Show HN" type posts would generally be positive, or at least constructive and polite. Even if there was no feedback to offer, people would still leave a congratulatory comment about launching.
4-5 years ago it felt like the only people who understood what you went through to launch were people on this site, everyone else including family and fellow co-workers at big corp were negative about the idea of leaving a "safe job" to pursue a dream.
But now with everyone having an idea about the next big app, and blockbuster movies coming out about the geeky kid who did follow his dream, everyone else is starting to "get" us, they can relate. So the feedback you get from outside of HN has become positive, and so the feedback from HN has become more of a "reality check".
I don't see why it just can't be polite but constructive though.