[-] freedickpics@lemmy.ml 1 points 11 hours ago

Lame that there's no Mac version. If the original game could do it in 2009 with a smaller dev team why not now?

[-] freedickpics@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 day ago

Very late reply but I've been running UBPorts on a Fairphone 4 for a couple of years and the camera works fine (besides very oversaturated colours in photos, but I'm not sure if that's a software issue or the phone itself)

[-] freedickpics@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 day ago

It's also absurdly lacking in features compared to Android/iOS (never mind app support) and the dev team is so small they can barely maintain existing device support. VoLTE is still unsupported in the majority of devices. The OS doesn't even have basic security features like drive encryption

I like UBPorts a lot but I think the alternative/FOSS smartphone market is too fragmented between it and SailfishOS/PostMarketOS that none of them will emerge with enough adoption to be real competitors to the iOS/Android duopoly. Didn't mean to be overly negative. Just my two cents

[-] freedickpics@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 day ago

Security/privacy. With a dumb phone you're restricted to standard phone calls, SMS messages, and (sometimes) email. All of which are ancient standards that weren't built with security in mind. Your network provider likely keeps logs on your calls and texts

[-] freedickpics@lemmy.ml 2 points 2 days ago

You can also take a complete backup of the iPhone using macOS’s Finder (the phone should popup there as a “drive” once connected via cable) and then backup everything to a HDD/SSD via TimeMachine

Just to piggyback on your comment, it is possible to directly back up an iOS device to external storage, but it's not officially supported. You have to create a symbolic link from the default backup location (~/Library/Application Support/MobileSync/Backup) to the external drive

[-] freedickpics@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 days ago

iPhone design peaked at the 11 Pro Max

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submitted 2 days ago by freedickpics@lemmy.ml to c/privacy@lemmy.ml

Over the two years until July 2022, Kmart captured the facial data of "tens or hundreds of thousands" of customers at store entrances and return counters

[...] after a three-year investigation, privacy commissioner Carly Kind found Kmart's use of FRT was disproportionate, and the company did not gain consent to use it on shoppers

As part of the finding, Kmart has been ordered not to repeat the practice in the future, and will have to publish a statement on its website within 30 days explaining its use of FRT and the regulator's finding against it

TL;DR: As usual for this sort of thing, Kmart faces no real consequences (not even a fine ffs!). Meanwhile the Australian government is pushing forward with its mandatory age verification laws in spite of (or because of..) huge public backlash. I hate this country

[-] freedickpics@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 days ago

This is the real problem. As more and more countries push for laws like this I think sites will just adopt blanket age-verification for simplicity's sake instead of having to constantly keep track of which countries/states in countries require it

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