from a shitty movie extremely loosely based on good sci-fi
I ran into something similar where the main Syncthing interface was limiting a folder to “Send Only” with that same “locked to read only” message. In my case I was able to work around it by going to the Web GUI and there I was able to set the folder in question to “Send & Receive”. I don’t know if it will apply to your situation, but you might give that a shot if you haven’t already.
The internal speakers cutting off while docked seems to be a bug; I had the same issue and was able to work around it by following this comment.
For music, I have FreeTube and Tidal installed as non-steam games. I’d prefer if I could hit the media control shortcuts on my keyboard and control Tidal while I’m in a game, for example, but I haven’t found a way to do that. The closest I’ve gotten is by installing Decky Loader and the Music Control plugin.
Good thing that ocean was there or 1600s Virginia would have claimed the entire planet with their innovative “peeling the label off a biscuit can” approach to real estate.
“Spending a huge chunk of the budget on dishonest advertising and then releasing a significantly different, half-broken game is still cool though.”
But when Youtube shares the key with me/my client the first time, is that also encrypted?
Here’s an explanation of what happens during the initial TLS handshake.
…if ISP automated the process of gathering keys and decrypting web traffic for a certain site with them for all users, would that work for them?
Not sure this is exactly what you’re asking, but there’s the concept of forward secrecy for defending recorded encrypted traffic from future key compromises.
Looks like someone cropped the attribution, but this was actually created by a friend of mine. He’s got some of his stuff available here: https://www.redbubble.com/people/comicalconcept/shop
EDIT: I think he made this stuff back around 2010. Wayback machine has his old site with higher res versions, including this one.