You could have outdated information on some forgotten page, or contradictory details across different sections [...]
If you allow user-generated content anywhere on your site (like forum posts or comments), someone could post fake support contact info,
None of those things would be Google's fault, would they?
If you go back and re-read the article, you'll find it's been edited, and now has no mention of any diseases and says the monkeys weren't infectious. So I think it was clickbait, after all.
Has the article been edited since being posted here? Because it doesn't mention any of those diseases, and actually says the monkeys weren't infectious.
Well, of course I don't want either poop or pee in my phone, but it matters which one I have, because I need to know what cleaning products to use.
If it's poop, then maybe I need to change all my passwords and keep especially on guard for fraud attempts, but if it's only pee, then I just need to remove/disable the app and I can stop worrying about it.
Has anyone actually analysed this app to see what information it can actually access? The few articles I've found don't elaborate.
Like, does it just track what games you play and websites you visit? Or can it log your keyboard, steal all your banking passwords and read all your private conversations?
After the report the other day that Trump said Musk would soon be gone, with Musk responding that that was fake news, I was expecting Trump to be playing the good cop.
Maxie Allen and his partner, Rosalind Levine, said they were arrested and detained on suspicion of harassment, malicious communications and causing a nuisance on school property.
...
The school said it had “sought advice from police” after a “high volume of direct correspondence and public social media posts” that they claimed had become upsetting for staff, parents and governors.
It certainly wasn't just "complaining on WhatsApp" that they were arrested for.
None of those things would be Google's fault, would they?