Levelman123
Levelman123 t1_j27iqmy wrote
Reply to comment by DaRadioman in New York breaks the right to repair bill as it’s signed into law | The bill was signed by NY governor Kathy Hochul on December 28th, making New York the first US state to broadly protect a consumer’s right to repair their own tech. by chrisdh79
Okay. Then just make it so they have to sign in to their account first? I'm not sure where this convo ended up
Levelman123 t1_j25vazh wrote
Reply to comment by Ashmizen in New York breaks the right to repair bill as it’s signed into law | The bill was signed by NY governor Kathy Hochul on December 28th, making New York the first US state to broadly protect a consumer’s right to repair their own tech. by chrisdh79
Hmm. Not bad, This could be solved by insuring the same customer locks remain in place throughout the transaction. Or at least at the beginning and end of the transaction. Like repair shops cant unlock phones for the reason of "forgot password" as that is not a repair issue.
I guess the better question to ask would be does apple tech already have this? If so what is the difference to a guy with 15 minutes of training but branded an "apple genius" unlocking my phone compared to a guy with 20 years experience in his own repair shop doing it?
Levelman123 t1_j25s4y2 wrote
Reply to comment by FeralCJ7 in New York breaks the right to repair bill as it’s signed into law | The bill was signed by NY governor Kathy Hochul on December 28th, making New York the first US state to broadly protect a consumer’s right to repair their own tech. by chrisdh79
You dont need to buy anything to unlock a phone right now. Those tools already exist is what i was getting at. Plus pawn shop aint the best example. All i need to do to get around anything a pawn shop looks into is factory reset the phone and remove the sim.
Levelman123 t1_j25k4yi wrote
Reply to comment by FeralCJ7 in New York breaks the right to repair bill as it’s signed into law | The bill was signed by NY governor Kathy Hochul on December 28th, making New York the first US state to broadly protect a consumer’s right to repair their own tech. by chrisdh79
Those tools exist en mass currently. Data centers get breached constantly, any incentive to steal your phone already exists. And that incentive doesnt go away just because the person behind the desk is from apple or a tech shop.
In fact apple service jobs have high turn over rate, so the incentives to steal phones is actually higher then if you just gave it to "tom's repair" down the street. Thats what im getting at. There is no difference in security, so when they block any repair bill using security as an issue, just know they are lying through their god damn teeth.
Levelman123 t1_j25ee60 wrote
Reply to comment by FeralCJ7 in New York breaks the right to repair bill as it’s signed into law | The bill was signed by NY governor Kathy Hochul on December 28th, making New York the first US state to broadly protect a consumer’s right to repair their own tech. by chrisdh79
Why cant Joe Blow on the street fix his own device? I don't know how licensing works with phone repair as i cant think of anything dangerous enough to warrant such licensing. If my phone is broken, i feel i should be allowed to take whatever steps i need to make it operable. There is nothing i can do from my phone that would give me access to any backdoor systems in their systems, if their is, that is a them issue, and they should deal with it on their end.
Levelman123 t1_j25c7hl wrote
Reply to comment by FeralCJ7 in New York breaks the right to repair bill as it’s signed into law | The bill was signed by NY governor Kathy Hochul on December 28th, making New York the first US state to broadly protect a consumer’s right to repair their own tech. by chrisdh79
No, do not even give them that. The FTC has done plenty of research on this. There is absolutely no difference in data safety when an "approved Technician" is fixing your device and a third party technician is fixing your device.
In fact common sense says the third party if established will actually be much more cautious and handle your data a hell of a lot more safely than some dude working at the genius bar that had a 15 minutes breakdown on how to see water damage and tell you "nothing we can do" as the third party establishment has to uphold their reputation while the the genius bar guy can just go get another job.
Levelman123 t1_j1wzo5d wrote
Reply to comment by TheHylianProphet in SpaceX activates nearly 100 Starlinks in Iran amid country-wide protests: report by chromatic45
A single starlink terminal can provide dozens or more with internet. pretty dang good internet. If anything comes of this it will be philanthropists providing terminals to the effected is most likely where this leads is my guess.
Levelman123 t1_iuj7fcp wrote
Reply to comment by InGenAche in eli5 What came of Edward Snowden leaking all of that classified intel? by tpb772000
Which is also wrong
Levelman123 t1_j2aj1v4 wrote
Reply to In which space simulator can I see science fiction stuff? by JediMastoras
Dyson Sphere program is exactly what it entails. You get to design and build a mega structure. I made a dyson sphere that was a giant flower engulfing the sun. One of the most beautiful times ive had in a space game. But its also a factory game, so expect hundreds of hours of your life to be forfeit. But as you stand on the cold dead world you have exhausted of resources of and the crazy shit you just put in the sky, its very worth.
Also space engineers is a pretty good sandbox for space structures and i think they got a space elevator, no megaprojects though.