Discover only removes it from ten sites.
Discover only removes it from ten sites.
They are talking about the password lookup: https://haveibeenpwned.com/Passwords
But, it’s the same deal. You have to trust they are actually doing what they say. Mozilla uses haveibeenpwned for their basic Monitor service too.
No. If your name is Dave Jones they have to look around those broker sites for Dave Jones. If those sites were using hashes then they could use hashes too.
This is no different than any credit or identity monitoring service. The need to give them basic information should be obvious, people have to decide if the company is trustworthy or not.
There is some controversy recently due to partnering with Brave for search results, and the response to comments. Brave tends to be controversial any time it comes up anyway, outside of Eich’s political views.
company x founder personal political views was not a factor in this evaluation for this or any any provider we added (for betteor or worse) and merit of technology was the main factor. Politics finding its way into tech is one of the reasons we do not have innovation any more
People can go whatever direction they want with that.
Someone would fork something and continue on the old path (probably with a lot of the old user and devs).
Posts like this always ignore that people do things because they’re interested in it.
Yes, SUSE Linux Enterprise Point of Service often ends up being a source of “Linux in the wild” posts.
What stuff? Snap? The official flatpak? The official deb repository?