I assume this will allow carmine red (cochineal) to be considered as "natural", since it's just "crushing thousands of bugs".
Unfortunately, a few cases of negative reactions to cochineal have been documented, and if the coloring is not even indicated in the ingredients, it might make it much harder for people to find out if that turns out to be the cause.
Nah, it's just a basic case of a pivot from a company that previously offered a great open source (MIT licensed) product written in Go that offer WebRTC-based backbone to build audio and video sharing products upon: https://github.com/livekit/livekit
The AI stuff that the original LiveKit company put on top of it (to pivot to more investor-friendly endeavours) is not that relevant in this case, in my humble opinion.
The URL you linked to results in a 503 error (Service unavailable) and the Wayback Machine returns "Error code: 403 Forbidden" with "Looks like there’s a problem with this site", for all timestamps I tried, in 2025 or 2024.
I'm outside the US so that's probably the cause. Is such information available elsewhere?
> Which, in a subject like algebra, is extremely suspicious ("how could both of them get the exact same WRONG answer?").
In Germany, the traditional sharp-tongued answer of pupils to the question "How could both of you get the exact same WRONG answer (in the test)?" is: "Well, we both have the same teacher." :-)
Always stunned by how much teachers can accuse without proof and invert the "innocent until proven guilty".
Honestly, students should have a course in "how the justice system works" (or at least should work). So should the teachers.
Student unions and similar entities should exist and be ready to intervene to help students in such situations.
This is nothing new, AI will just make this happen more often, revealing how stupid so many teachers are. But when someone spent thousands for a tool, which purports to be reliable, and is so quick to use, how can an average person resist it? The teacher is as lazy as the cheaters they intend to catch.
Student unions tend to focus on all sorts of other issues, I wouldn't trust them to handle cases like this.
The only way to reliably prevent the use of AI tools without punishing innocent students is to monitor the students while they work.
Schools can either do that by having essays be written on premise, either by hand or by using computers managed by the school.
But students that are worried that they will be targeted can also do this themselves, by setting up their phone to film them while working.
And if they do this, and the teacher tries to punish someone who can prove they wrote the essay themselves, either the teacher or the school should hopefully learn that such tools can't be trusted.
It's also the case that even pre-Web and certainly pre-LLMs, different schools and even departments within schools had different rules about working with other students on problem sets. In some cases, that was pretty much the norm, in others strictly verboten.
It’s strange watching people put so much faith in these so called “AI detection tools”. Nobody really knows how they work yet they’re treated like flawless judges. In practice they’re black boxes that quietly decide who gets flagged for “fraud”, and because the tool said so everyone pretends it must be true. The result is a neat illusion that all the “cheaters” were caught, when in reality the system is mostly just picking people at random and giving the process a fake sense of certainty.
I hope this could be a "teachable moment" for all involved: have some students complete their assignments in person, then submit their "guaranteed to be not AI written" essays to said AI detection tool. Objectively measure how many false positives it reports.
Warning: this website froze my Firefox and I had to kill it. It started running at 100% CPU and then my browser stopped responding. I tried closing the tab but it kept running.
Core77 has the worst site, and it’s been like that for years. I guess they did a redesign 20 years ago, and it just limps along. I don’t know what their finances are like, but it’s clearly not going into the site.
The main reason I stopped using Lineage is because I got a Pixel and wanted to keep maximum picture quality with it. Open-source photo applications, from what I understood, cannot access all of the hardware features to get photos as good as Google's app.
Is it enough to get the Google Camera APK somewhere else and use it? Or do I really need to keep the OS as Google intended, in order to get best picture quality? I don't have the time lately to do much tinkering and compare it by myself.
> The main reason I stopped using Lineage is because I got a Pixel and wanted to keep maximum picture quality with it.
I think if you get a Pixel, then you should use either Stock Android or GrapheneOS. I don't see the point in using something else.
> Is it enough to get the Google Camera APK somewhere else and use it?
With GrapheneOS, you can install the Play Services, the Play Store and then the Google Camera. I would be surprised if that wasn't enough. In fact I would be surprised if you needed more than the Camera APK. But like you, I haven't made the comparison. Would be interesting!
>With GrapheneOS, you can install the Play Services, the Play Store
Why use GrapheneOS if you are going to install Google Services anyway? The whole point of Graphene is to have a fully locked down OS that still works as it should. A mobile fortress basically. Installing Google Services defeats the point imo as it opens multiple security holes in the fortress.
May as well just install the stock os. At the end of the day, once Google stops shipping sec updates for your phone, firmware updates stop so that's it really. Graphene cannot give you the firmware updates anyway. And at that point, you have a vulnerable phone. I think graphene os makes more sense if you go all in. Otherwise there is no much point really.
That absolutely is not the point of the project and completely misses out on the many general privacy improvements that GrapheneOS makes, as well as the huge privacy improvement offered by running Play Services in the untrusted and unprivileged user-app sandbox.
It doesn't open up any holes since google play services are not allowed any special access on grapheneOS and run as a regular sandboxed app. You can make a separate user profile just for google apps.
It does if you want to fully use google play services. If you run google play services as a regular app, you cannot use banking apps, whatsapp (app works but no backups to gdrive) or uber for drivers. And you also cannot do purchases in the app store sadly. If you can live with this then fine.
It just seems odd to me, may as well install LineageOs if you just want an alternative android os really. You get more privacy controls than stock android. I just feel that the whole point of graphene is to be able to have a private phone and live outside big tech and you pay a price for that.
If you don't really care that much about privacy and are happy to let google apps run in the background then data about you can still reach the mothership but your smartphone experience is quite degraded imo
> It does if you want to fully use google play services. If you run google play services as a regular app, you cannot use banking apps, whatsapp (app works but no backups to gdrive) or uber for drivers. And you also cannot do purchases in the app store sadly. If you can live with this then fine.
This has nothing to do with it being sandboxed. You are talking about the SafetyNet api, which makes sure the device is using the "official" android version.
> If you run google play services as a regular app, you cannot use banking apps, whatsapp (app works but no backups to gdrive) or uber for drivers. And you also cannot do purchases in the app store sadly. If you can live with this then fine.
I do at least some of those, so I can say you are making wrong claims. I won't test all of them, it would be your job to test them before claiming that they don't work.
> It just seems odd to me, may as well install LineageOs if you just want an alternative android os really.
GrapheneOS is a lot more secure, and in my experience I get better support than I did with /e/OS.
> You get more privacy controls than stock android.
I do on GrapheneOS, even though I installed the Play Services and Play Store. I love being able to run them in the sandbox!
> I just feel that the whole point of graphene is to be able to have a private phone and live outside big tech and you pay a price for that.
Well you are not forced to install the Play Services. But if you own a phone that is supported by GrapheneOS, I would say it's a better choice than anything else out there.
I am currently using 4 banking apps from 3 different banks on GrapheneOS, they all work just fine. I'm also using WhatsApp and would not use the backup feature to Google Drive even on PixelOS. Uber (haven't tried the for drivers app), and other ride hauling apps also work fine.
Why would I choose LineageOS instead of GrapheneOS? I can't see any benefits in using LineageOS, I only see major drawbacks.
Why is it always 0 or 1 with privacy? Why can't I use GrapheneOS with sandboxed Google Play Services? Seems like the best option. I can still use all the apps I want and also get privacy and security benefits. I only give Google what I want and still get to live like a normal person, without making huge compromises on security, privacy, usability and GrapheneOS has been the most stable OS I've used. More stable than the stock PixelOS.
> Why use GrapheneOS if you are going to install Google Services anyway? ...
> May as well just install the stock os ...
> I think graphene os makes more sense if you go all in. Otherwise there is no much point really.
No, Grapheneos is quite more secure than stock os when comes to handling google play service if you need to use it.
The security you get is not free. The price you pay is functionality. Can't buy subs or buy apps on the app store. Forget about using banking apps on your phone and resign yourself to use Whatsapp with no cloud backups.
Imo, installing a Google app on your phone is living under the influence of Google. The apps can still run in the background and collect and ship info about you. Less influence sure, but still a ton if they get to run background services.
Everything I want to do works on GrapheneOS. Actually better than it did on /e/OS.
> Can't buy subs or buy apps on the app store. Forget about using banking apps on your phone and resign yourself to use Whatsapp with no cloud backups.
I use at least some of those, so... you make wrong claims :-).
> Imo, installing a Google app on your phone is living under the influence of Google.
You're entitled to your opinion. IMO, if you use microg you still allow your non-Google apps to contact Google. If you use Android apps, or if you use the web, you're under the influence of Google. That sucks, but that's how it is.
I think the same issue was had if you used an Xperia phone long ago (I think mine was an XZ1c). It was really disappointing that the camera was worse if not using official software due to DRM keys or what not.
The Pixel Camera app is on the Play Store, and I was able to install it just fine on my Pixel 8 running GrapheneOS (inside a separate profile running Google Play Services, not my main profile)
The google camera app should be enough. It's commonly done on GrapheneOS. But the GrapheneOS camera app uses some of the same hooks so it's not as far from Google Camera as some others.
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