Same here, for my ISP it’s no extra charge, they just ask you why you’re opting out
Same here, for my ISP it’s no extra charge, they just ask you why you’re opting out
I don’t believe anything is actually copied until you request it to be pasted. The clipboards in Linux mark where the data is, and don’t actually initiate a copy until there’s a destination.
I’m one of those people that uses DLSS, because I’ve got a large fancy 4k monitor that is big enough that is looks like shit at lower resolutions.
DLSS is better than nothing but it’s no replacement for native rendering, it introduces a heap of visual anomalies and inconsistencies, especially in games with a consistent motion (racing games look like shit with DLSS), so I tend to be having lows of 50fps on medium before I’ll even think about DLSS.
I’m also pretty sure Nvidia is paying devs to have it on by default, because everytime it’s patched into a game they clear all the current graphics settings to turn on DLSS, at least in my experience.
Unfortunately you can’t easily patch the fleshy thing operating the system
Tldr; chromium based browers are more vulnerable to password stealing malware because they encrypt with the OS user creds, Firefox would probably avoid this with a master password, as thats the primary protection of this that password managers offer.
Generally security programs like this that do keylogging are context aware and don’t include passwords, plus if it’s a managed device they probably wouldn’t need keylogging to obtain passwords if that was the objective. Significant amount of endpoint protection software will allow for RAM capture, which would have your passwords as well.
Furthering this, if you’re accessing managed applications (say OneDrive or Sharepoint) it’s common to prevent access to a device that doesn’t have all of the monitoring software installed.
Looking at Tesla’s support the US is crippled by the 120v power grid for wall charging, 3 Miles per hour on a standard 120v plug, and 23kmh on an Australian 240v 15A plug.