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joined 2 years ago
[–] [email protected] 1 points 30 minutes ago

Why do people still use youtube, honestly

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 hour ago

Mf its been time to do that since 2013 for facebook and since musk bought twitter.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 1 day ago (1 children)

This is a long 24 hours of ending the war

[–] [email protected] 82 points 1 day ago (2 children)

After bro tried to short con the election

[–] [email protected] 12 points 2 days ago

Google waving its huge cock around again. Cant play nice with the decentralized world of email. They HAVE to keep everything locked in their own ecosystem.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (1 children)

On the flip side of this, i think its okay to be that way, but we should also try to do what we feel is the right thing to do. What surprised me about being an adult is how incredibly unique everyone is, and how much crap we all go through. It can be a problem at times, but its also great to step in their shoes and learn a new perspective.

Going into any social situations, I try to be aware that someone may be having a rough day, and a small, unexpected, friendly gesture can help make their day a bit better. Even if it takes 5 minutes out of your entire day being inconvenienced (thats 0.35% of your entire day), you can make someones day 100% better for the rest of their day, week, or even month. It just feels so rewarding to help when you can. At least it does to me.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Is it on the Arch User Repository?

[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 days ago

Ah, it can be monitored remotely by microsoft. Not creepy at all.

[–] [email protected] 69 points 5 days ago (4 children)

How about a national militia of tesla burners?

[–] [email protected] 2 points 5 days ago

This is the company that's going to take over TikTok?

[–] [email protected] 17 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Two-thirds of survey-taking Americans say*

[–] [email protected] 23 points 6 days ago

Maybe all unions in the USA should stop working at all, nationally

 

It seems that the latest AMD Adrenaline drivers for Windows require that you agree to AMD's AI Acceptable Use Policy.

This was not present on the 25.2.1 optional drivers, but is required on the 25.3.1 drivers in order to complete the installation.

 

After years of intense standards development, the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) officially published today Messaging Layer Security (MLS) as RFC 9420. MLS is the first global open standard for end-to-end encrypted communications and has been jointly developed by industry peers and academic institutions. Wire was an initiator of MLS in 2016 and has been a key contributor ever since.

“The advent of Messaging Layer Security marks a monumental leap forward in establishing secure communications, poised to redefine the entire communications industry permanently.” says Alan Duric, Co-Founder and Chief Scientist of Wire. “Previously, technologies like Voice-over-IP and WebRTC played a significant role in democratizing global communication. Now, with MLS, we are building upon this success to again impact billions of people and achieve secure communication at an unprecedented scale. Moreover, MLS serves as anessential technical foundation, enabling interoperability between encrypted messaging solutions on an Internet-wide level.” Messaging Layer Security is inspired by the huge success of encrypting the communication between users and websites and other web services using Transport Layer Security (TLS), a crucial security component of today’s Internet. Messaging Layer Security adds end-to-end encryption to messaging applications by providing a standardized and open framework.

Messaging Layer Security is inspired by the huge success of encrypting the communication between users and websites and other web services using Transport Layer Security (TLS), a crucial security component of today’s Internet. Messaging Layer Security adds end-to-end encryption to messaging applications by providing a standardized and open framework.

Benefits to technology providers and end-users

Messaging Layer Security brings many benefits to technology providers and end-users alike. MLS already enjoys wide support within the industry and will thus be a reliable basis upon which to build applications and services. As a global open standard under the IETF, no one individual or organization can decide solely to change the protocol. For end-users, MLS will bring performance benefits for communication within large groups, as well as accountability on membership in messenger groups and increased interoperability.

“While many of the changes MLS introduces to the communications landscape are ‘under the hood’, users will feel the increased speed and reliability of the protocol. Security, but at Internet scale”, says Rohan Mahy, Vice President Engineering, Architecture at Wire. “The new mechanism where we derive the group encryption keys from all participants of a group is not only much more performant than encryption using today’s encryption mechanisms. It also allows for much better accountability of a group’s membership – as participants who are removed from a conversation will not be able to decrypt any further messages that are being sent.”

More Interoperability

Messaging Layer Security is the logical protocol choice for the work that the IETF MIMI Working Group (More Instant Messaging Interoperability) is undertaking. Interoperability between end-to-encrypted messenger services is not just wishful thinking; it is a compliance requirement. Under the European Commission’s Digital Markets Act article 7, large providers of Instant Messaging Services are required to make APIs available for interoperability from 2024 onwards. Wire is in close discussion with the European Commission and the relevant technical regulators to advance this process.

Wire was one of the initiators of Messaging Layer Security in 2016, and has been a key contributor ever since. Employees from companies such as Mozilla, Cisco, Google, Cloudflare, Amazon, and Meta; and research organizations such as INRIA, Oxford University, The US Naval Postgraduate School, and ETH Zurich have made major contributions to the protocol. We want to extend our gratitude towards this incredible community of peers and to the IETF for facilitating this process.

Wire: Delivers end-to-end encrypted messaging, voice, and video chat; on-prem or in the cloud; for security-conscious customers such as Orange, Exxon, the German Federal Government, and law enforcement agencies and military worldwide. All Wire’s code is open source for transparency.

IETF: The Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) is the premiere Internet standards body creating open protocols to ensure that the global Internet is built on the highest-quality technical standards. These standards, shaped by rough consensus and informed by running code, are developed by a large volunteer community of leading engineering and technical experts from around the world. IETF processes are open and transparent, and IETF standards are freely available to anyone.

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