Wikipedia is the default source of information for AI Training, for SIRI, and from many other secondary sources of information. But is the information on Wikipedia reliable? They claim to be unbiased and they claim to have rules to prevent rogue editors.
But learn the real truths. Disinformation is more than possible with enough resources. And resources come from many places.
Something very basic that the average person does not care about even if they knew about it. Your every click on a website is tracked. Every single one. How does this work? Surprisingly easy enough to understand yet apparently no one wants to explain this.
There are ways around this for the privacy conscious but the mechanics of the tracking has to be fully understood.
A rant. The most irritating thing for those of us who are privacy conscious are comments like "what are you hiding?" or "as long as you follow the law who cares?" or "you're paranoid".
I'm sure I'm not alone on this. Well, if you get irritated by this, then there is nothing wrong with you. Ignore these NPCs but you also need a smart understanding of why you do need to care and why these NPCs are the ones who are wrong.
The intent to scan content to counter end-to-end encryption is no longer theoretical with the passing of the UK Online Safety Bill.
How would the OS makers then build in client-side scanning? Let's tackle a theoretical project to do this on your favorite operating system (Windows, MacOS, iOS, Android).
This would be how I would do it.
@robbraxman Lunduke have a main page(lunduke.com) where he post links where people can follow. Maybe you should do one like this.
@robbraxman
I just finished to install openWRT on my router and I am thinking maybe something like that should be sold in your store.
Or even better routers with openWRT and wireguard configuration for bytzVPN, so when you buy it just plug it and you have bytzVPN for all devices from your house.
In my case I flashed 2 TP-Link routers with openWRT and believe this brand can be easy used for this purpose.