Does it link to the Google policy that they say that it violates? Are you certain the archive is clean and doesn't actually contain an executable malware?
If you're not sure, you could upload the book to VirusTotal and have it scanned.
If the researcher had spent as much time auditing the code as he did having to evaluate the merit of 100s of incorrect LLM reports then he would have found the second vulnerability himself, no doubt.
It depends on the provenance of the code and who (if anyone) is downstream.
A project that's packaged in multiple distros is more likely to be reliable than a project that only exists on github and provides its own binary builds.
Who are you? Even a known and respected cryptographer would not release a tool with such confidence. First you need to request testing and code review before you announce to people that it is a "secure, anonymous file-sharing platform."
This is not a community for sharing your personal programming projects for feedback. If you post here, there will be non-technical users who don't know how to evaluate the security of tools and won't understand they are taking a huge risk by using your unknown alpha release project.
I have a friend who says he has a terrible memory and he often asks me to tell him about things that happened in the past that we experienced together. You should definitely ask people close to you to do the same.
This was such a great RTS/FPS hybrid at the time. I looked for RTS/FPS games a couple of years ago when I remembered it, and the genre is all but dead. I did spend a lot of time playing Silica though, which is still in early access. I haven't checked in on that in a while now though.
They front a huge percentage of the internet, so you can pretty much guarantee that all of the three-letter agencies have their fingers in Cloudflare's infrastructure, whether they cooperate willingly or not.
If you care about your privacy you should avoid these kind of infrastructure monopolies, since they are such a juicy target.
It's a bit of an apples to oranges comparison, because the Spectrum and C64 were general purpose computing devices that ran a single program at once, whereas the 5090 is not designed to be a general purpose computer, but a massively parallel acceleration card with a pipeline designed primarily for 3D graphics rendering.
A better comparison would be to a modern general purpose computing device, like a smartphone or desktop PC.
I haven't tried it myself but I've seen other people say that when they go back to an old Facebook account, Facebook will require a scan of their ID in order to log in. They can be a real removed about letting people log in to accounts that have been inactive for a long time.
What car sensors are normally accessible to CarPlay and Android Auto, and what are they used for?
My car doesn't expose any car features or sensors to CarPlay at all. I just use the connected display for maps and playing audio.
Could you link the RPi projects that you've seen? Sounds interesting.