I was reading some phlogs about the growing dependence of the Web on G products, particularly content delivery networks (CDNs) and GMaps. Afterwards I went into my few webpages and downloaded the TTF fonts I used and changed the page to use local files instead of G's CDNs. It's a bit more troublesome than copy/pasting the G css embed code. Yargo's [0]post on a big tech app needlessly invading a work setting reminded me of a recent issue I had trying to clean my girlfriend's phone: it had MaaS360 on it from a job from 2 years ago. This idiotic app had Device Manager permissions, meaning it is basically an "owner" level permissions. I get when dealing with customer financial data the need to be secure, but come the F on. I tried for about half an hour trying to get rid of this POS. The only way to remove it, I found, is to open the app, log in (she no longer has the credentials), and manually turn off mobile device management (MDM). Yeah, tough to do that when you can't log in. I thought about resetting the phone but 1) she had stuff she didn't want to lose on it and 2) it occurred to me that MaaS360 probably would remain after a factory reset given its permissions. Oh, yeah, the title: So I have been rewatching V for Vendetta lately, and it just reminded me of all the pervasiveness of big tech companies on the Web: easy to adopt, difficult to escape, and no concern for the privacy of users/citizens. I'm thinking I need to add some of the lines to my quotes.txt. Fun fact that I had forgotten: V for Vendetta is a DC Comics movie. P.S. Sorry for potentially "talking down" with the explicit acronym definitions, but it's annoying for me to have to go to Urban Dictionary just to figure out some shorthand. I had to look up MDM myself. [0] gopher://zaibatsu.circumlunar.space/0/%7eyargo/clog/yg-depending-on-kraken.txt