Even if they did that, there are ways to do that without compromising privacy.
I'm carsick without any nausea involved.
in that case it’s Cloudflare which gets to see all the sites you visit
That's the status quo. CF holds the private keys to all reverse proxy'd sites hosted on it.
I always open YT in Firefox Focus, which doesn’t ever keep cookies or history each time I close it, so there’s no history for YT to mine each time I visit again.
This is not true. Google doesn't much care about cookies; they employ far more effective means of fingerprinting.
This locally hosted web application started as a 100% ChatGPT-made application and has evolved to include a wide range of features to handle all your PDF needs.
O.o
It's quite complex but I use git-annex for this purpose.
Labelling CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 as "proprietary" is a bit of a stretch but it's certainly not going to be free software anymore, at least not every part of it.
Note that while chocolatey is a package manager in some sense, unlike "proper" package managers, it relies on the individual apps' Windows installers to execute the actual installation functions.
It also contains tonnes of unfree software; it's just a repository for installers afterall.
Borg hat im Gegensatz zu rsync den Vorteil, dass auf der Sub-File-Ebene dedupliziert wird, d.h. nur weil eine Datei sich an einer Stelle geändert hat, wird der Rest der Datei nicht nocheinmal kopiert.
Rsync kann sowas auch (einer der ersten großen Nutzer von rolling hashes AFAIK). Der wichtigere Unterschied ist, dass rsync kein backup tool ist. Für ein Backup will man etwas mehr als Daten effizient von A nach B zu kopieren.
It's a bug in the webp library; everything that can decode webp is affected.
That sounds like a thing that is dependant on the WiFi chip and its firmware. In that case, there's nothing anyone but its vendor can do about this.
The problem in this has never been (at any point) advertising.
Advertising is problematic too but not because of privacy issues.