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13 votes
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A decade and a half of instability: The history of Google messaging apps
22 votes -
Youtube screws me over for three years and counting
2 votes -
Pay cut: Google employees who work from home could lose money
16 votes -
Google co-founder Larry Page gets New Zealand residency
13 votes -
Zoom to pay $85M for lying about encryption and sending data to Facebook and Google
28 votes -
Apple, Google and aligned incentives
7 votes -
The Google Olympics doodle contains a pretty entertaining game today
google.com - Should be on the main page, click, watch (or don't) the cute little opening cartoon, enjoy various games across an island with various stories behind each area.
18 votes -
Authenticated brand logos in Gmail will roll out over the coming weeks
8 votes -
Google Search has an unfair performance advantage in Chrome (on Android)
10 votes -
Trump files lawsuit against Facebook, Twitter and Google
14 votes -
Why Google Play’s APK replacement is scaring some security experts
15 votes -
Differential privacy code removed from Chromium
In a discussion on Hacker News, Jonathan Mayer pointed out that the differential privacy code was removed from Chromium. It looks like they finished doing this in February. I haven't seen any...
In a discussion on Hacker News, Jonathan Mayer pointed out that the differential privacy code was removed from Chromium. It looks like they finished doing this in February.
I haven't seen any announcement, discussion, or explanation of this based on a brief web search, so I figured I'd note it here.
At about the time this process finished, there was a Google blog post about how they're still using it in other products.
We first deployed our world-class differential privacy anonymization technology in Chrome nearly seven years ago and are continually expanding its use across our products including Google Maps and the Assistant.
(If you read this quickly, you might think it's still used in Chrome.)
Reading between the lines, I suspect that some folks at Google are still advocating for more usage of differential privacy, but they lost an important customer. Why that happened is a mystery.
11 votes -
In leak investigation, tech giants are caught between courts and customers
9 votes -
US Democrats circulate draft antitrust bills that could reshape Apple, Amazon, Facebook and Google
15 votes -
DeepMind reportedly lost a yearslong bid to win more independence from Google
8 votes -
Why does a completely local, self-contained html file need to access gstatic.com?
So, I'm a privacy advocate (or paranoiac, depending on your perspective). I run both uMatrix and NoScript plug-ins (among others) in my Firefox browser, so I can see when and where websites send...
So, I'm a privacy advocate (or paranoiac, depending on your perspective). I run both uMatrix and NoScript plug-ins (among others) in my Firefox browser, so I can see when and where websites send calls out to other locations, and block the ones I want ... google analytics, google fonts, google-apis, google tag manager, and gstatic are all ubiquitous out there, probably 99% of websites use at least one of them (PS: Tildes is in the 1%; yeay, Deimos).
And note ... there may well be nothing at all wrong with any of those sites/services ... but Google has a global all-encompassing Terms and Conditions policy that says, you use anything of Theirs, and They are allowed to harvest your personal data and make money off of it.
And I do not accept those terms.
Okay, that's the prologue. The deal is, I have a small piece of documentation, just basic "how to use this" info, for a WordPress plug-in. It is in .html format, with bundled bootstrap and jquery and a few other assets.
Nothing, anywhere in the entire folder, references gstatic. And yet when I open this local, on-my-computer-only html file ... my browser tells me that it is trying to connect to gstatic.com.
Anyone happen to know why/how that is happening?
4 votes -
Google AMP pages no longer get preferential treatment in Google search
14 votes -
Google I/O 2021: The fourteen biggest announcements
6 votes -
Google Docs will now use canvas based rendering
13 votes -
Android Automotive OS review
4 votes -
How China turned a prize-winning iPhone hack against the Uyghurs
11 votes -
Carbon emissions and large neural network training
5 votes -
Misinformation about Permissions Policy and FLoC
8 votes -
Am I FLoCed?
22 votes -
After working at Google, I’ll never let myself love a job again
23 votes -
Rust in the Android platform
7 votes -
Supreme Court of the United States sides with Google over Oracle
46 votes -
Chrome's address bar will default to HTTPS
10 votes -
A look at search engines with their own indexes
26 votes -
Google’s FLoC is a terrible idea
31 votes -
Ubuntu sends http requests to Google cloud, here’s a fix
Ubuntu has this package installed by default: network-manager-config-connectivity-ubuntu It's only purpose is to provide settings for NetworkManager to send requests to...
Ubuntu has this package installed by default:
network-manager-config-connectivity-ubuntuIt's only purpose is to provide settings for NetworkManager to send requests to connectivity-check.ubuntu.com , and based on the result (AFAIK) detect redirection by captive portals and open an ISP's page (think public WiFi, or hotel rooms, where you need to authorize to access the net).
Well, connectivity-check.ubuntu.com is hosted on Google cloud (you can check that by running:
dig connectivity-check.ubuntu.com whois [the IP from previous query]
), so by default Ubuntu sends requests to a Google cloud page.
I don't say Google counts daily active Ubuntu users (because many of those have the same IP), or that Google actively logs and analyzes that data. But some of you guys may not like that behavior.So what's the fix?
Purge the package
sudo apt purge network-manager-config-connectivity-ubuntu
If you do need a captive portal detection, create your own config file to query some HTTP (not HTTPS) page of your choice, in the example below I have a Debian page used for the same purpose. Use your favorite text editor to create and edit /etc/NetworkManager/conf.d/90-connectivity-custom.conf :
[connectivity] uri=http://network-test.debian.org/nm
Restart NetworkManager
sudo systemctl restart NetworkManager
If you run an Ubuntu derivative, please report if you have network-manager-config-connectivity-ubuntu installed in the comments.
11 votes -
Data Transfer Project
6 votes -
Google to stop selling ads based on your specific web browsing
29 votes -
Version 2 of Google’s Flutter toolkit adds support for desktop and web apps
7 votes -
How Big Tech helps India target climate activists: Companies such as Google and Facebook appear to be aiding and abetting a vicious government campaign against Indian environmental campaigners
6 votes -
Google-free /e/ OS is now selling preloaded phones in the US, starting at $380
14 votes -
Arizona advances bill forcing Apple and Google to allow Fortnite-style alternative payment options
7 votes -
Stadia developers can't fix the bugs in their own game because Google fired them
13 votes -
Help with Google accounts authentication on iOS/iPadOS
Edit: This was resolved by @tomf (cf. this comment). Google’s account authentication appears to broken for me for some reason. I have several devices and several Google accounts accumulated over...
Edit:
This was resolved by @tomf (cf. this comment).
Google’s account authentication appears to broken for me for some reason.
I have several devices and several Google accounts accumulated over the years.
Accounts:
- Work Google account (this was set up by IT staff at the company where I work as they are a paying enterprise Google services customer)
- Undergraduate University account (this was set up when I attended undergrad, where the University is a paying Google services customer)
- Graduate University account (this was set up when I attended for grad school, where the University is a paying Google services customer)
- Personal Google account (this was set up a long time ago, it’s just a non-paid, consumer Google account)
Under iOS and iPad OS, Google apparently asks you to download the official Google app in order to sign in and “trust” devices, so that they can send you prompts to acknowledge when you sign in on other devices. There is also the Google Authenticator app that lets you do traditional 2FA.
Further background, I got an iPhone 12 Pro circa October 2020. I gave my old iPhone handset to my dad (after signing out of everything and resetting it according to Apple’s instructions). Ever since, I’ve been having issues with logging into my Google accounts from the new iPhone, my iPad, and my Mac (provided by work). I’m actually afraid to log out of my work Google account on my work Mac, because I’m afraid I won’t be able to log in again, and that would prevent me from being able to get work done.
For example, let me walk through the steps I would normally take to log in to my Undergraduate University Google account on my iPad:
- Open the Google app
- Tap user icon in top right corner
- From the modal menu, tap the downward chevron (circled in red)
- Tap “Add another account” (circled in red)
- Tap “Continue” on the confirmation widget when prompted
- Enter the Gmail address for the account in the provided “Email or phone” input box and tap “Next”
- At this point, I wait for the progress indicator (the blue bar with the red arrow pointing to it) to indefinitely traverse from left to right over and over again and I cannot progress further.
Virtually the same steps can be reproduced from my iPhone by going to accounts.google.com from any browser (I’ve tried Safari and Chrome).
The same sort of authentication redirect from accounts.google.com happens when trying to add my associated Gmail accounts to my iOS devices from the Settings > Mail > Accounts > Add Account, and similarly stalls at the same point.
I’ve tried logging out of my accounts from my personal Mac where I can still log in from google.com, and also tried going into the security settings for the accounts and disabling, then re-enabling 2FA (I can receive the text message with the code to associate my iPhone as a second factor authenticator, so Google knows my phone number).
Google’s support documents don’t provide any guidance on this situation where the accounts.google.com authentication hangs, and there seems to be no way to contact a human being at Google to provide technical support. I’ve searched their help portal/forums, and found nothing similar to my issue. They point me down a tree that ends here, which is not useful to me.
If Google’s services don’t work for you, it seems to be your problem, not theirs. I get that I’m not paying for their services, so it is totally unreasonable for me to expect any sort of technical support from Google. But, at the same time, it seems very strange that I am alone in my use case of simply trying to log into my accounts that have worked for years in the past without issue.
Anyone have advice on next steps?
5 votes -
Google submits plans to build 7,000 homes in North Bayshore, the largest project in city's history
11 votes -
Slay the Spire for Android is out
19 votes -
I have $15 burning a hole in my Google Play balance. Help me figure out what to spend it on.
Here's a list of Paid Games & Apps that I already have bought. Utils Tasker KLWP Sleep as Android Nova Prime One or two Icon packs for Nova Games Desert Golfing Death Road To Canada 2 Meteorfall...
Here's a list of Paid Games & Apps that I already have bought.
Utils
- Tasker
- KLWP
- Sleep as Android
- Nova Prime
- One or two Icon packs for Nova
Games
- Desert Golfing
- Death Road To Canada 2
- Meteorfall
- Mindustry
- Mini Metro
- Ordia
- Prune
- Reigns
- Reigns: Her Majesty
- RowRow
- Teslagrad
- UnCiv
- .projekt
- Sword and Sworcery
I'm looking for something worthwhile to spend it on. Is there a lesser known utility app that you use all the time? What about an indie game not getting the praise it deserves? Tell me about it!
17 votes -
Google Stadia shuts down internal studios, changing business focus
24 votes -
Google has suspended the Element Matrix client from the Play Store due to abusive content (It's back)
@Element: Google have suspended Element in the Play Store without notifying us; we're reaching out to find out what's going on. Apologies for the inconvenience; in the interim there's https://t.co/aaZ9qXz69W but it's a few versions behind. We'll post updates here.
31 votes -
Google to pull API keys from unofficial builds of Chromium, including those for Linux packages
19 votes -
Google union in turmoil following global alliance announcement
7 votes -
Google LLC v. Oracle America, Inc. lawsuit: Can APIs be copyrighted?
14 votes -
Google threatens to pull search engine in Australia
15 votes -
New side-channel attack can recover encryption keys from hardware security keys
5 votes