Very true!
At least non-cops can only scope out your place for a future robbing, be a perv or plan to blackmail you.
An officer can do all that and also kill you with an almost 0% chance of facing any consequences!
Very true!
At least non-cops can only scope out your place for a future robbing, be a perv or plan to blackmail you.
An officer can do all that and also kill you with an almost 0% chance of facing any consequences!
TFA has an example of a fake warrant being used and the fake being clearly fake but accepted anyways.
I know a few people who happily have ring doorbells in their house as cheap cameras and don’t seem to care at all that all an officer has to do to get INTERIOR footage of their house is to ask for it and they get it no questions asked.
I hadn’t even thought of how easy that makes it for non officers to just do the same thing.
The article, while interesting feels like 3-4 articles copy/pasted together haphazardly
Same, it’s kind of a symbolic gesture since I apparently haven’t used DB since 2018, but still, I cited them sharing files with AI companies as the reason.
I’ve got a couple of Raspberry Pi Zero’s that emulate a mass storage device (basically it acts like a USB drive) that I have connected to 3D printers and my wife’s embroidery machine.
Instead of using it with a network share like in the link, I share the folder with SyncThing.
It’s super convenient to not have to move a USB drive around and can just leave it connected and get the files on there seamlessly.
Love Bookstack!
The dev has also got a PeerTube instance spun up:
https://foss.video/
Comcast unlimited data is an extra 50 for my area.
Evil bastards. I make sure to get my money’s worth though
Right?! Super easy to be “privacy focused” when you just flat out refuse to acknowledge anything as personally identifiable information!