I think a pass phrase is more secure than a password because you can memorize truly huge strings without worrying about ever losing it.
queermunist
My logic is impeccable.
How about the risk of dumbass managers overestimating AIs ability to save on labor costs and firing too many workers to function?
It's not a worker cooperative, there are problems with it like any employee owned company, but don't be so cynical.
Huawei is a employee owned and communist state backed company - not very capitalist, at least by comparison.
They're being hammered with export restrictions and sanctions and federal bans and executive orders to keep that from being a viable alternative in the US, but if you're outside that might be an option.
I don't even know what LFP means so~
I would find this all extremely concerning if China didn’t regulate US platforms so heavily. For example, Tiktok has safety limitations for children in China while they have nothing at all for children in the US. It’s being used as a social/mental health weapon.
So you're saying China is better than the US because it regulates social media while the US does literally nothing for its own children.
I agree.
So! Instead of political banditry and forcing TikTok to sell to a US company we should regulate our social media companies too just like China does! Or do you really think TikTok will collect less data or exploit children less when it is owned by a US company? 😂
¿Por qué no los dos?
Also doubles as a kill list for when they decide it's time.
You're going to have to explain to me why the first password is more secure than the second pass phrase. The second has more characters and that's the only thing someone trying to guess is going to possibly know. There's nothing else to go off of, they don't even know they're trying to guess words in the first place. The longer string is always more secure afaik