“The threshold is set to provide an extremely high level of accuracy and ensures less than a one in one trillion chance per year of incorrectly flagging a given account.”
How did they calculate this? Also, I can imagine more than a trillion photos being uploaded to iCloud a year.
I help my clients solve tough SEO problems and make the right decisions about their websites and content. My expertise covers minimizing the impact of website migrations, SEO for multi-domain website architectures (ex. China), finding dynamic rendering problems and more. From creating a search strategy to reverse-engineering the rankings of your competitors, planning better content, and optimizing your web-pages, I offer a process-oriented and transparent approach.
Since the entire Servo team was laid off, I can image the c-suites planning a future move to Chromium. If Mozilla doesn't clean up its act, in a few years from now all browsers will be Chrome in different packaging (except Safari).
Safari isn't even all that different from Chrome in terms of its rendering engine; after all, Blink is just a further development of WebKit.
That said, there is a bright side of a browser engine monoculture: JavaScript will finally meet its very long-overdue demise. Google could implement Dart or an evolution of that language (they tried this around 2010, but Blink wasn't on 95% of [desktop] computers back then) and kill off JS overnight, since if every browser supports it by default, there's no reason not to use it over JS.
The massive downside, of course, is that Google also has the ability to design its browser so that extensions that perform adblocking can't run, and that'll be everywhere too- though I suspect that the number of people who would pay the price of a VPN connection a month for a modern browser with guaranteed ad-blocking support is quite large provided there's no other choice.
I help my clients solve tough SEO problems and make the right decisions about their websites and content.
My expertise covers minimizing the impact of website migrations, SEO for multi-domain website architectures (ex. China), finding dynamic rendering problems and more.
From creating a search strategy to reverse-engineering the rankings of your competitors, planning better content, and optimizing your web-pages, I offer a process-oriented and transparent approach.
I help my clients solve tough SEO problems and make the right decisions about their websites and content.
My expertise covers minimizing the impact of website migrations, SEO for multi-domain website architectures (ex. China), finding dynamic rendering problems and more.
From creating a search strategy to reverse-engineering the rankings of your competitors, planning better content, and optimizing your web-pages, I offer a process-oriented and transparent approach.
I help my clients solve tough SEO problems and make the right decisions about their websites and content.
My expertise covers minimizing the impact of website migrations, SEO for multi-domain website architectures (ex. China), finding dynamic rendering problems and more.
From creating a search strategy to reverse-engineering the rankings of your competitors, planning better content, and optimizing your web-pages, I offer a process-oriented and transparent approach.
I help my clients solve tough SEO problems and make the right decisions about their websites and content.
My expertise covers minimizing the impact of website migrations, SEO for multi-domain website architectures (ex. China), finding dynamic rendering problems and more.
From creating a search strategy to reverse-engineering the rankings of your competitors, planning better content, and optimizing your web-pages, I offer a process-oriented and transparent approach.
SEEKING WORK | SEO / TECHNICAL SEO CONSULTANT | EU | REMOTE
I help my clients solve tough SEO problems and make the right decisions about their websites and content.
My expertise covers minimizing the impact of website migrations, SEO for multi-domain website architectures (ex. China), finding dynamic rendering problems and more.
From creating a search strategy to reverse-engineering the rankings of your competitors, planning better content, and optimizing your web-pages, I offer a process-oriented and transparent approach.
I think this is historically inaccurate and tbh it's also a bit dangerous to think that, making money from your art is wrong because this wasn't always the case.
There’s nothing wrong with making money from your art. People weren’t making money from art in the past centuries because until a recent time in history there was no market for it or for almost anything else, and also no property rights.
The only market there was after the fall of the Roman Empire and until the end of feudalism, was church commissioning some art and construction.
Also, I don't understand the argument about artificial scarcity. Original art has inherent scarcity, and this is the foundation of the art market. And a digital album that can be copied by anyone with a tape recorder, CD drive or computer didn't prevent bands from making serious money, even in an environment of abundance.
Finally, markets are not that easy. There is a market for art as there is a market for SaaS, or services. And most SaaS companies fail, just like most consulting agencies and most artists that don't become commercially successful.
Artists choose to seek patronage in order to minimise risk, and we are lucky that contrary to the past, they can do so without giving up their rights to opportunity, as it used to be the case.
“The threshold is set to provide an extremely high level of accuracy and ensures less than a one in one trillion chance per year of incorrectly flagging a given account.”
How did they calculate this? Also, I can imagine more than a trillion photos being uploaded to iCloud a year.