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Their failure to do that is by design.
Their failure to do that is by design.
Sorry I know I could just switch to rawhide and try it, but I’m curious.
What I’m trying to ask is, once I’ve set up authentication and given access, does a logged in kde plasma session need to be running for me to remote in? I.e. would this survive a reboot.
I’d like to be able to access my desktop from my laptop on occasion while not physically having access to my desktop (I.e. over VPN). Is this possible yet?
Do you have to already be logged in on the remote computer?
If by"gut instincts" you mean “gets me paid”
But that would cut into profits
All of it
That makes more sense
X is the w
Probably worth noting that this bot uses LSA and, at least as I understand it, is quite different from gpts and the current wave of “AI” as discussed in this article.
Does/could this support HDR on plasma 6?
Edit, yes, it does.
Whatever you have to tell yourself to avoid sounding like you’re using the same transportation method as the commoners.
It’s been a wild season, I’m sure
Imo look into opensuse if you want newish stuff without living on the bleeding edge.
Fedora can be an option too if you stick a version behind the latest
That’s just because the early stuff was 480i. There are some upscaled versions available, but I’m not sure if anyone streams it.
At least we’ve all got reasonable unemployment measures to make sure these people are able to transition to better work.
It’s an authorization to give the executive branch the authority to ban. Completely different.
I’m not sure “Open Home Foundation” was the best name to give a privacy focused advocacy program. It kind of sounds like the opposite.
Yeah, probably more boring than I assumed; podman with 1 apt based distro, one rpm based distro, and Nixos. Each doing an independent build and packaging in their respective builds systems.
I was hoping for some rube Goldberg’s machine of compilation, but that’s probably not the case.
Here’s the actual relevant part
These are security risks to be sure, and while these permissions are (mostly) on the surface, possibly defensible, together they do clearly represent an app trying to gather all of the data that it can.
However, a lot of info from this report is overblown. For example code compilation is sketchy to be sure, but without a privilege escalation attack, it can’t do anything the app couldn’t do with an update.
Also, there’s some weird language in the report, like counting the green security issues in other apps (like tiktok) as if they were also a problem, despite the image showing that green here means it doesn’t present that particular risk.
All of this to say, if you have temu, probably uninstall it. It’s clearly collecting all the data it can get.
But it’s unlikely to be the immediate threat that will have China taking over your phone like this report implies.