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Vague in some ways is OK, but one thing you should spell out initially is where you have to be to take advantage of this. It sounds like an in-person thing, so unless you want the majority of applicants to be disappointed after investing interest, you should clarify that participants need to be in a certain area, e.g. NY, Seattle, SF, Kansas (good luck with that one...).


We just updated our landing page. Thanks!


something something Japan


The future of eroge has never looked so bright.


Think rot13 plus a moderate RAM dependency. It uses either a lot of read/writes or a lot of RAM, pick one.

Takes enough time and resources to extract so doing a bunch will be a pain for a scraper, but not so much that it can't be done in real-time.


Very interesting! I wonder at what resolution they print and whether they can print capacitive materials.


Imagine the potential of adding IFTTT or Evernote integration, not to mention having it tap into GTD systems like OmniFocus.


The core of the outrage about Superfish is centered on the fact that it is preinstalled, that we are given no choice about its existence. In the case of PrivDog, we do have a choice to install it. Shady software will always exist, it's just that in the Superfish case it was shoved down our throats without our knowledge.


The core of the outrage about Privdog is that it's created by the founder of Comodo, and distributed with Comodo products, and therefore Comodo doesn't really seem like a company you should trust, but you don't have a choice, because they're a trusted root CA.


Well, they are a company you'd trust, given they're a CA. If I saw something made by Comodo, before today, I'd probably assume it was safe...


Which therefore calls for a deep, deep look at who we do trust and who we should trust.


The question is, do you trust Comodo's Privdog ad-networks more or less than all the others out there? If you are already trusting Comodo as a CA, wouldn't you think that Privdog's ad networks have been through some sort of approval process by Comodo and therefore, more trustworthy somehow? Thus, wouldn't it be better if those were the only ads you saw? That seems to be their sales pitch.

The implementation lacking any cert verification is a total fail (it might not be intentional at all), and I personally trust http://localhost:8080/blocked.gif more than any ad network... but I can see the reasoning behind the product.


I'd argue that this is also stealing from the content creators or other people/companies that added actual value (e.g. group running a forum that pays for hosting with ads).


Can't we just remove their root certificate from the trust stores then?


Yeah but you don't expect shady software from a company that's supposed to be protecting us.


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