This tutorial is very well written and I'll be following it for one of my personal projects later today.
That being said, I really hope reusable workflows[1] will be released to Enterprise users this year so that I can actually use GitHub Actions in a professional capacity. My engineering org is microservice-based and management isn't allowing GHA usage until it does, and rightfully so - maintaining a hundred different implementations of the same workflow would be suboptimal at the very least.
>On analysis of the file, I found that the vast majority of the records are actually related to sex, porn, and other smartphone brands. There are mentions of Tibet, Hong Kong, and other religious groups, however, mentions of the CCP and “China” are also included, too (albeit there are a lot fewer mentions of China and Chinese politicians comparatively). One would think that if this were a list that exists to censor content that may go against the Chinese Communist Party, all mentions of “China” would not be censored online.
It appears more likely that the phone is tracking sentiment and mentions of items on the list, as opposed to applying it as a strict list of censored phrases, and that's far more dangerous to users (obviously censorship would still be bad regardless).
Having worked at a competing Chinese smartphone brand, I can say that there exists legal requirements for controlling content (i.e. yellow and political content as well as mentions of competitors) that is published on your own platforms. This is mainly a legal requirement for the Chinese market, with added on requirements from in-house legal teams, and this get applied on overseas markets when launching a piece of software there.
It is much more likely that it is basically just a list of words and phrases. The in-house content security system we had was extremely rudimentary, especially in languages other than Chinese.
that's pretty vague, first of all last month is in the last year; even if we assume in the last year to mean longer than a year ago the or so part can also imply leeway before that year is out (this is of course a regional usage, most places in U.S I think take last year or so to mean a year or more)
usage of vernacular speech while humanizing also has the effect of making things inexact.