I don't understand why this is any different, privacy wise, to web browser/document version/command prompt/pasteboard features that allow the user to go back
@shellsharks agree and i understand that it might be flawed or buggy, and even can be a resource hog. But I'm wondering what's the difference with those other conveniency features of basically any modern OS
If a hacker can reach into that indexed data, they most definitely can get all my command prompt logs, file history, web browser and clipboard stuff, right?
@carloshr do we know if the passwords would be stored/indexed in a way that's different to how it's done in a web browser's saved credentials or clipboard history?
btw the issue would be an attack that would leak those passwords right?
@shellsharks I do use "arrow up, arrow up, arrow up" on the terminal hundreds of times a day hah. And I like the clipboard history in my phone and desktop, and file versioning in office files is useful too.
I would guess that even the mere presence of undo/redo functions in any software could be technically considered a "spyware keylogger". Though saved in memory and not permanent storage
OpenAI says it's not unveiling a "search engine". I am 100% calling it now: they're making a search engine but calling it an "answer engine" or some bullshit, "it's next gen because it comes back with explanations, not a list of web sites."
@steven could we work to add https://openfollow.social to the profiles? I think it would be a great feature, and I could add some custom things if needed