Interesting, thanks. Apparently the low reviews are from prior years before they stepped up their game, from what I can tell.
Interesting, thanks. Apparently the low reviews are from prior years before they stepped up their game, from what I can tell.
I can’t find anything about this actually being open-source, so I’m inclined to stick to Boost for Lemmy by Mayayo…
Which is hopefully used locally only.
Ha. Haha, ha. Hahaha. Hahahahaha.
And then?
Thanks! Is it just me, or are videos from this website no longer loading?
Interesting. Can you comment/post using it, though? The description makes it out to be just a reader app.
At first, I thought you were talking about any FOSS alternative to this Pac-Man-like shooter: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.jakyl.fmn&hl=en
What do you mean; is “connect” some sort of URL-filtering service?
Interesting, I didn’t know that. So how do they derive the digits?
Do you think the SMS codes are not time-based on the companies’ ends? How are they deriving the digits, then?
“Time-based One-Time Password” literally says nothing about the delivery method. Who said it can’t involve remote sending?
And what would you call it, then, SOTP?
Anyway, regardless of the terminology-nitpicking, my point still stands.
I don’t love the idea of having an authenticator app installed on my phone
For anything? Why not? Surely you don’t believe SMS-based TOTP is safer, right?
It just keeps getting better and better. As far as I know, it pioneered quoting parts of messages inside replies; I wonder how many other chat apps will catch on and mimic it.
Hmm… true! And yes, there sure is: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=net.waterfox.android.release
web storage
Google Drive?
It’s strange that it doesn’t have Waterfox. Anyway, that wasn’t my point in the first place; first, Mozilla has to release its bug fixes, and then all these other browsers’ devs have to release their own counterparts in response. It is during this window in time when they’re most insecure, since the issues are then brought to light while users are helplessly waiting.
I was implying that it could be <10 years if there was no opposition to the new tech.
Mostly due to lobbying?
But these smaller ones are scary to follow because they’ll always lag behind on security updates.
Like what? Could they be nullified if we just disabled its Internet access?