Just keep in mind, that could block legit users who are outside the country. One case being someone traveling and wanting to buy something to deliver home. Another case being a non-resident wanting to buy something to send to family in the service zone.
I'm not saying don't block, just saying be aware of the unintended blocks and weigh them.
Also consider tourists outside of their home country. If, eg I'm in Indonesia when Black Friday hits and I'm trying to buy things back home and the site is blocked; shit. I mean, personally I can just use my house as as a VPJ exit node thanks to Tailscale, but most people aren't technical enough to do that.
Yes, I'm calling that questionable. Says who? TCGs have entire formats designed in opposition to the high cost random booster shit. I think that's pretty good evidence that there's high negative sentiment.
Valve is simply larger and took legal heat for people misusing the API.
There's plenty of outrage about paid loot boxes and viewing them as terrible, terrible gambling that exploits consumers and ought to be regulated/banned. Not everyone agrees with this take, but it's still fairly widespread.
Now, you do see people pointing out that trading card games are basically still gambling -- and no one really disagrees with that -- you just don't see the same level of outrage about it. What you usually see is grudging acceptance, ala "what're ya gonna do, that's just how these card games are".
I've never had an issue with this with Samsung. Hell, I don't think I've even cleaned out lint once on my current S24U over a couple years. Idk how you other people are brutalising your phones tho.
If you put your phone in your pocket, little bits of lint get in the port. Just tiny little bits. Then, when you use a USB-C plug, those tiny bits get compacted. Over time this results in a thin layer of compacted lint in the bottom of the port. Eventually this layer is thick enough that the USB-C cable won't positively lock onto the port. It'll still work, but it'll disconnect if you move it sometimes and just start to feel finicky.
I have to clean my port maybe once a year or so. I wait until the cables aren't locking and then I clean it out. The dental pick makes it easy and you are just dislodging that compacted mat of lint and removing it. Conversely, my wife never has the problem. Her phone never goes into a pocket, just her purse.
Haven't encountered that yet. But I always try to be extra careful and also look for the thinnest ones I can find. Seems like a product niche right there. Rigid, thin, non-conductive picks.
Some time ago, I used a module for Xposed on Android called XPrivacy which did exactly that. Yes, creepy app, you can have my location. It's Antarctica.
It does look like Xposed has successors, but my current approach is to just be selective about installing apps.
I use netguard and forbid network access by default for all apps. Mildly annoying for apps that need network access as I have to approve, but it's worth it.
The vast majority of apps need to use the network, at least sometimes. Eg turning network on to download podcasts then off to listen to them is annoying.
Depends on what apps you are installing. I love denying access to the network for games. It removes almost all ads from them. Even beyond full deny access, NetGuard gives you a lot around the conditions in which an app can access the network. I'd prefer if I didn't have to do any of this and the OS was on my side though.
On an unrooted Android you could use App Ops to do some of that with Shizuku.
I assume they don't expose it to users because once most people start to do that apps would start to implement detections, like if it spoof your location to a certain area then that area will get you "permission denied" error anyway, or I believe some apps do check that if your contact book is empty it assume you didn't give the permissions. It'd become a lot of work to implement a convincing spoof for most permissions to be blocked.
The University of Florida (Gainesville, FL), has a small nuclear reactor on campus. My mom always talked about it when I was young as she worked in the nuclear engineering department. I just checked and it's still active. Apparently it's been online since 1959.
Horizontal scaling of remote MCP Servers is something the spec is sadly lacking any recognition around. If you've done work in this space, bravo. I've been using a message bus to decouple the HTTP servers from the MCP request handlers. I'm still evolving the solution, but it's been interesting so far.
If you are writing a bespoke Agent with a constrained set of tools known in advance, MCP is a detriment. All it will do is introduce complexity, fragility, and latency.
If you have that nice Agent and suddenly marketing "needs" it to talk to Super Service A, you either go back into a dev cycle to create a new set of curated tools that live inside the Agent around SSA *or* you make the Agent capable of acting as an MCP Host and configure a new MCP Client connection to an MCP Server offered by the SSA team. If SSA doesn't have their own MCP Server you could potentially leverage a 3rd-party one or write your own as a fully encapsulated project that doesn't live inside the Agent.
MCP isn't meant to be *the* way you provide tools for your Agent, it's meant to prove a *standard* that allows you to easily add off-the-shelf tool sets via simply configuring the Agent.
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