That's literally just a long password that you can never recover your data from when you inevitably lose or forget it (remember we're talking about the majority of users here who do not use password managers).
douglasg14b
I do now!
One device has a red/orange theme. The other is blue themed.
I really need a light behind the monitor to really value it in though. I rarely see my background with all the windows open.
Custom launchers have their own issues. I've tried them such as Nova launcher and I really just don't like the experience.
I'm not sure what your point is because nothing you said changes what I said.
Accidents happen, I for sure know this. Especially when you're sick, or overworked, or just sleep deprived.
Even moreso if you only have 1 desk and use a KVM.
It'd be nice if comments like yours would give folks a second thought instead of riding in on a high horse just to shit on someone and leave. It's not what we need on Lemmy.
Yeah but this requires you to use an entirely different launcher which has its own caveats...
You can if you are in the EU.
Google just says fuck you to everyone else because they get away with anti-competitive practices.
For a huge number of phones it's a requirement because Google and Android do not allow you to customize or change this aspect of the device.
Unless you're in the European Union in which you get the right to.
Fuck Google.
If only we had a choice to... You know... Not use the stupid thing
Unfortunately that right is only reserved for EU Citizens.
Google needs to be broken up.
Imagine this comment existing before woman's suffrage.
Mass protests are how change has always happened to the oppressed. The oppressed have always continued to be oppressed when they take the stance of your comment.
The comment two above this links to a tool that literally does live syncing on a line by line level. Unless you're editing the same lines at the same time you're not going to get sync conflicts.
I use it as well and it works wonderfully in real time.
It should be $0 because this was a credential stuffing attack (Using breached passwords people reused), and affected people who knowingly shared their data with other people.
23&me didn't leak data, they didn't have any database breaches, their infrastructure wasn't compromised due to negligence...etc The majority share of negligence is in the users here.
Yes, they should have MFA, but also no, most sites and services don't force you to use MFA to begin with, and that's not a regulatory requirement anyways.
This is, for the most part, the fault of the folks using terrible security practices such as refusing passwords and sharing their data with other users. And this is a shitty precedent to set where the technical reasons for this event are thrown out the window in favor of the politics of it.