

I think my level of excitement is going to be tied to the person asking me if I want to meet the bees. If it’s a nice old German lady, cool. If it’s Christoph Waltz, I’m going to be concerned.
I think my level of excitement is going to be tied to the person asking me if I want to meet the bees. If it’s a nice old German lady, cool. If it’s Christoph Waltz, I’m going to be concerned.
Every application kind of needs two modes: a default mode where the user is railroaded into making the right decision, and an “I’m not an idiot and will actually read the documentation before/after trying to make things work” mode. If you stick the toggle for the two modes somewhere that you’d only find by reading the documentation, people will automatically categorize themselves into the mode the ought to be in.
Alright, hear me out: we split up Alphabet. Ads and search can be one company, since those two are always going to be related, while Chrome, Android, and the hardware division become the other company. This should help reduce Google’s current incentive for privacy invasion.
Ok, so the headline is a bit clickbait-y. It’s not not everyone who ever watched the video that they are interested in, it’s one person they are trying to track down. Still concerning from a privacy standpoint, but it’s not like they are trying to say that watching the video was itself a crime.
Possibly out of the loop here, but what is Tabula Rasa?