If you are not an LLM, those are some nice writing skills you got going on there.
Again, this sort of thing surfaces again.
Peeps, if you really have to take naked pictures of yourself, go get an old digital camera with no internet access.
Do you not think that "they" can make naked pictures of you while you are in the shower from a drone 3 miles up in the sky? I mean, it might be that they can't do it, but I even can imagine methods of doing that, given enough resources. So, either I am the smartest person in the world or they can already do it. Take your pick.
How desperate do you think "they" are to see your naked ass? Not being an asshole or anything, but I doubt I would want to see it even if you were waving it in my direction for free.
I think they don't care, but that it was a natural technological development to develop such a capability.
If you can measure what a world leader is whispering at a security conference, wouldn't that be nice? Wouldn't you want to know that? How about listening into literally everything every world leader has ever said? There is no point to stop your surveillance development programs until you have accomplished that goal.
If you can intercept the source signal, there is also no need to ever decrypt anything.
I found a foolproof way to ensure this can NEVER happen: don't allow nekid pictures of yourself to be made.
Two words: generative AI.
don't lock your door, lockpicks exist
same energy
wow i love big tech
Kekw
Waaahht?!
This bug is probably just more fallout from the industry's crusade to do away with conventional file management. I.e. they are obsessed with reinventing the wheel and making it shittier and less reliable in the process. Other day I upgraded the music player on my (non-Iphone). The older version allowed you to just browse through the files. The new one requires the use of a precompiled file database. Not only does it take forever to build and hammer the battery in the process, but then the piece of shit crashes half way through the indexing process because the massive list of files is presumably too big for the database to cope with.
It's so bad that I've seen stories where university professors were complaining that students don't have basic file management skills. That's not a bug, it's a feature, brought to you by big tech companies. The less understanding you have of how your device works, the more you are reliant on them, and the more they can e.g. blur the line between what files are on your device and what files are shared with the government --- I mean up on the cloud.
We had Winamp running on a 486. Now, we have "Spotify" and iTunes. I can't imagine the stupidity people must have to use those services.
I think a file system is too complicated for a lot of people and in particularly, it's bringing order to the chaos that is difficult for many people.
A menu structure also is too complicated for many people.
SMCAB |7 pointswritten 29 days ago ago
Well, gonna have to go down and make an appt with a "genius." When he comes out after half an hour of picking his nose and wiping on it on his frumpy khakis, you're gonna have to tell him not to look at them but you need help with your possible revenge porn material. He will than smirk and leave with your phone and come back and tell you it's all fixed. It's not, he will be tweezering his little wee wee all night to your selfies that make you feel so good inside because you "felt cute." You'll be on a Japanese website in an hour. Good luck.