I also wonder if a lot the big tech companies don't share data on users to cross identify accounts and fingerprinting data of your browser when you log in and access their services to be able to tell who is who.
Aside from the obvious problems with your IP address when using a VPN.
Woah... Thanks for the information mate. I had heard about TPM 2.0 in regards to people who were not happy about Windows 11 and how their relatively new hardware was not supported. I can't say I cared much - I'm 95% on Linux on a few years old system and I have a really old machine still running Windows 7 for a few things and I have a Windows 10 gaming PC for flight simming but I literally never use it for anything but that and it has a pirate version on it.
Does seem to track with the agenda for a single digital ID tied to everything you do.
Do you see open source hardware coming on the market that might not incorporate TPM 2.0 on the basis its cheap secure hardware for Linux distros only? Some OEM's are selling machines with Ubuntu or other distros at the moment. I can't help but think there would have to be a market in hardware that didn't incorporate this technology for certain government departments or corporations who didn't want everything every machine did fingerprinted.
I also wonder if a lot the big tech companies don't share data on users to cross identify accounts and fingerprinting data of your browser when you log in and access their services to be able to tell who is who.
Aside from the obvious problems with your IP address when using a VPN.
Woah... Thanks for the information mate. I had heard about TPM 2.0 in regards to people who were not happy about Windows 11 and how their relatively new hardware was not supported. I can't say I cared much - I'm 95% on Linux on a few years old system and I have a really old machine still running Windows 7 for a few things and I have a Windows 10 gaming PC for flight simming but I literally never use it for anything but that and it has a pirate version on it.
Does seem to track with the agenda for a single digital ID tied to everything you do.
Do you see open source hardware coming on the market that might not incorporate TPM 2.0 on the basis its cheap secure hardware for Linux distros only? Some OEM's are selling machines with Ubuntu or other distros at the moment. I can't help but think there would have to be a market in hardware that didn't incorporate this technology for certain government departments or corporations who didn't want everything every machine did fingerprinted.