Passkeys are also weirdly complex for the end user too, you can’t just share passkey between your devices like you can with a password, there’s very little to no documentation about what you do if you lose access to the passkeys too.
Passkeys are also weirdly complex for the end user too, you can’t just share passkey between your devices like you can with a password, there’s very little to no documentation about what you do if you lose access to the passkeys too.
There isn’t one.
You can combine several other services though, such as Matrix for chat, Mumble or Teamspeak for voice, and OBS + BroadcastBox for game streaming.
Have you tried wiping the phone and being careful about what apps you install?
The camera specifically says it was accessed by the camera app which seems perfectly normal. The microphone being unknown is odd.
I remember going to a presentation in Boulder Colorado in 2005 or somewhere near there about how the world will run out of oil in 10-15 years, they had tons of data they had collected with a bunch of researches and everything.
We just keep discovering more and more oil, and get better at extracting it.
I use https://greasyfork.org/en/scripts/431970-fb-clean-my-feeds for facebook.
uBlock Origin with various annoyances filters enabled takes care of a ton of stuff as well.
Just keep regular full system images (as you should be anyways, as part of your 3-2-1 backup plan), and you’ll be fine as you can just restore an image if everything gets broken.
Is that something you’re worried about? The link says there would need to be both a browser exploit and a system exploit on top of that to get out of the sandbox, which seems pretty unlikely to happen when running uBlock on a mobile browser.
It seems like one of those things where it’s not as secure but it really doesn’t matter in reality.
If they’re not portable how would I for example login to an account while on my Desktop, if I set up the passkey on my Phone?
Pixel 7a is pretty good. Cheap too now that they’re 2 generations old, around $330 new for an unlocked phone.
I think looking at business/enterprise models would give you the best luck, as some of them should use a PCIe Wifi/BT card so it can be easily upgraded, and you would be able to remove that.
Notebookcheck.net often has images of a teardown in their reviews where you can see if it has a removable wireless card.
People like this aren’t usually rational, they’ve just snapped for whatever reason and are doing whatever makes sense in their own head at the time.
Sounds like maybe a faulty battery failing early, it should be under warranty I’d imagine if it has only been a few months?
You’re not going to find an alternative that everyone has, because only Quick Share is included by default on Android devices.
The battery health indicator could be wrong, does it still run as long as it used to?
Pretty sure this is a straight up scam, the RAM changes depending on which site you find it on with none of them showing 20GB of actual RAM, and the website for ‘doogee’ doesn’t work
I’d take a guess that from their perspective, putting all that time + money into developing and supporting a Linux version isn’t worth it when probably ~3% of the user base is using it.
Outgoing should already allow everything, so no need to specifically allow it.
Make sure you’re creating a block rule specifically on outgoing in that case.
Is wireguard incoming or outgoing from the machine you’re trying to block it on?
Does it work like that? Everything I see says they’re tied to that device.
Fair, I guess I’ve never lost a password because it’s just a text string in my PW manager, not some auth process that can fail if things don’t work just right.