Have you ever flown on a Frontier or Spirit flight?
Have you ever flown on a Frontier or Spirit flight?
The way that profiles works today is the reason I don’t use it. Chrome just handles it all so gracefully between profiles and opening links from other applications.
To be fair, everything is on-demand now, but it doesn’t change their greediness.
And offline. And in the quality you define. And on any device.
The owners of archive.today explicitly block using CloudFlare DNS because it doesn’t provide sensitive geolocation information which is optional as a part of the DNS standard.
You can Google archive.today and CloudFlare, there’s tons of blog posts and articles.
Edit: https://jarv.is/notes/cloudflare-dns-archive-is-blocked/
Just FYI for anybody that looks it up, it appears to be a paid application.
This is where I think the flaw is in your system. You wouldn’t necessarily want to give your friends evul-friends@foo.com. Because once you start getting spam to it, you can’t nuke the email, because more then one person has it.
This is why one address per recipient or service makes the most sense. Not user defined, but completely random or maybe what the Fastmail automated emails do.
I suggest doing some market research before building your product/service so you are designing something that has the best fit for your consumer, and I think Fastmail handles things better than your service would right now, based upon what you’ve shared.
Fastmail offers this as well. I suggest looking into their offerings.
I think Fastmail already handles this gracefully, and has all the right integrations. Why should I use your service over Fastmail?
For example, the integration with Bitwarden can generate a new username for every site you go on.
I think to an attacker, your naming allows for identification of the pattern.
Also, 100% spam identification… nothing in the world is 100%. Unless you count the verification for someone to send you an email, which I don’t know if I consider spam identification.
I’ve experienced the same. My whole feed is basically that these days, and you would think that people would keep it professional. I think actual ads, plus the crazy levels of nationalism, almost everyone being indoctrinated in the IDF, and most Israelis knowing someone who has been impacted, explains it, but boy is it annoying when you’re trying to do anything career related.
I don’t really think that’s a fair comparison when you’re emulating things and not running them natively.
I think your bias may be showing. The average computer user doesn’t even think about using a password manager. It just exists and works in their browser.