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That sounds like a self-discipline problem. It would be highly beneficial for you in and outside of the office to work on that.


I don’t have any close friends. I love working from home. I love the freedom of being able to work from any location. And most of all I love being able to focus on work instead of having to wear noise cancelling headphones so I can drown out other people chatting about YouTubers and Netflix series’ while I’m trying to get my work done while I’m at work in order to avoid working from home during my personal time.


I agree. Memorizing algorithms to answer leetcode questions have their benefits but it’s extremely rare that a front end web developer would need those skills. If they did, that would mean the backend engineers aren’t using the right approach to organize and serve data to the client.


The point is if you know the basic algorithms and can apply them you don't need to memorize the answers to leetcode. You can (Gasp) come up with them.


Depends on the company. If it’s a Chinese company like TikTok, data is stored in China and therefore property of the state. Things are about to get worse and they crack down on private companies in China.

And it’s not just Americans who worry about this. When word got out that Line was storing user data in China servers, it blew up in the news in Japan and Taiwan and went into immediate investigation. Line ended up moving Japanese user data to South Korea. Chinese aggression and Xi’s obsession with power is not just something Americans spout off in Reddit and YouTube comments. They’re a legit threat to Taiwan, Japan, Australia and India.

https://asia.nikkei.com/Business/Technology/Line-cuts-off-ac...


TikTok is run by a US-based subsidiary of ByteDance

They have insisted “that TikTok U.S. user data is stored in Virginia, with a back-up in Singapore and strict controls on employee access.”

https://techcrunch.com/2020/08/17/tiktok-launches-a-new-info...


China's state security laws trump all "strict controls" for employees.


Which employees? The ones who aren't Chinese citizens and aren't located in China? What does China state security have to do with them?


ByteDance's Douyin product has Chinese employees that are based in China. TikTok employees are also ByteDance employees which means a ByteDance employee that passes through their "strict controls" can access whatever TikTok data they want. Even if that's a dozen Chinese nationals that can get access that's a dozen people required by Chinese law to help the state security aparatus.

I don't see any reason to give them the benefit of the doubt considering they already moderate content the Chinese government doesn't like [0] as a matter of company policy.

[0] https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2019/sep/25/revealed-...


> Depends on the company

I was referring specifically to Apple & iCloud (and I thought GP was as well).


Hasn’t Google been parsing Google Photos images, email content, and pretty much everything else since forever? Do you just stay off of smartphones and cloud platforms entirely?


Microsoft and Google have been doing that in their online services for ages, but not on your personal devices.


So if I don’t backup with Google Photos or Google Drive, would they be safe for now?


yes theoretically.


They scan things I send them.

They don't (publicly announce that they) scan things on my device.


The Apple feature discussed here is for photos being synched to iCloud Photos. It does not scan arbitrary local content.


> It does not scan arbitrary local content.

Yet.

Before it was "only content uploaded to iCloud is scanned" and now it's "photos are scanned on-device". That's frog boiling that tomorrow easily becomes "arbitrary files are scanned anywhere on the device".


Only photos being uploaded to iCloud are scanned on device for CE imagery. This is the alternative to having cloud storage having broad decryption ability to do scanning in-service (as say Microsoft, Google, Twitter, and Facebook do)


They already can decrypt iCloud photos, why else perform an on-device scan ? If not with the intention to scan all local contents ?


And the matching photo is uploaded upon match. So regardless the photo is uploaded. What's the point again of taking this further step?


That is an EXCELLENT question, fwiw.

They could have just had a local failure. I suspect there were a lot of arguments around this point - should they be making an attempt merely to prevent such content from their servers, or to detect/report behaviors which may be illegal and harmful.


It also scans every photo that an iMessage user sends/receives.


I don’t think it’s fair for people to say you’re lying. People in the rural US really can be quite racist. Same in rural anywhere I suppose. I lived in Taiwan for a couple of years and although the racial ignorance does not go as far as racism and violence (maybe except toward southeast Asians) it’s strong. People will stare, comment under their breath, make ridiculous and insulting assumptions about you, call you names, etc. During the pandemic if you didn’t look Taiwanese some people wouldn’t even let you inside their shops or restaurants, they’d request to see your passport and travel history but let Taiwanese-looking people waltz right in.

I do think it’s fair to say people in rural areas of any country have less exposure to people outside of their own little tribe. Hopefully this continues to change as internet becomes more omnipresent.


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