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Not involved, but when a company is getting an engineer for 70k who passes the interview, that company is suddenly not that interested in their background.


They have shared IP address information before [1]. They have also shared information about the owner of a Proton Mail account with the FBI before.

In my opinion, Proton glows. If you're a nobody, they will protect your privacy, but if you matter then it seems they won't stand up for you. I still use Proton, but it's mostly for registering on sites for which I don't want to burn a Gmail account. I wouldn't do anything sketchy on it.

[1] https://www.vice.com/en/article/protonmail-under-fire-for-sh...

Note: my post is about Proton Mail, I have no idea about Lumo but I imagine the same hypocrisy applies.


> They have shared IP address information before [1]. They have also shared information about the owner of a Proton Mail account with the FBI before.

Any other mail provider can, and most certainly has, done the same thing when forced by a court order.

No one is going to go to prison for you because of your $5.

> In my opinion, Proton glows. If you're a nobody, they will protect your privacy, but if you matter then it seems they won't stand up for you.

How does this differ from any other SaaS service? Unless you specifically target "bulletproof" services, that are oftentimes blocked anyway due to facilitating fraud, scams, and other illegal tranactions (since the whole point is them not obeying the law while operating, until they inevitability get shut down).


Like the trisolarans


9 years? I could have sworn I saw it in 2015, maybe even 2014.


Disagree. There are people open to chitchat right now. They are just young. We just grew old, most of us are having families, and it would be weird to idly chitchat instead of playing your family role.


"That X? It was Y."

This formula is so tiresome. There is nothing interesting or novel about an obstructive customer service process. Everyone knows this, and the author of TFA shouldn't have bought a Ford to begin with.


It could just be mailing list negligence. Mailing lists are usually decoupled from the main user db/IAM.


Explains why Zuck has been training Brazilian jiu-jitsu.


I use my terminal too, but VSCode runs fast enough for me. Maybe it's because I'm a mid 30s year old boomer now, but I figure if it's caching symbol tables then the lag isn't the end of the world.

But for whatever reason, I'd rather vimdiff when I have to resolve conflicts on rebase.

What I really hate about VSCode currently is how huge pylance is though, and how it's all up in my grill when I am trying to manually code.


If your hobby is anything that requires focus or attention to detail, it's autism.

/s


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