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Periodic reminder that E2EE chat apps like Signal cannot protect you from a device that betrays you (MDM). I don’t use Signal on any work devices. I can’t do anything about my colleagues who chat with me and do.

Could you explain how MDM would breach E2EE? I know that it can be used to MITM TLS connections, but not aware of a way it would breach E2EE like Signal.

It doesn’t breach E2EE; it gives your employer control over the device. Once messages are decrypted on the phone so you can read them, anything your employer deploys via MDM (screen capture, keylogging, backup/forensics tools, admin unlock, etc.) can potentially copy them.

On a company-owned, fully managed device, you should treat MDM as roughly equivalent to handing your boss an unlocked device: anything you can see on-screen could be captured or exfiltrated by tooling they deploy.


Ah. In the EU, folks are mostly protected against that kind of overreach, even if the phone is a work device: https://globalfreedomofexpression.columbia.edu/wp-content/up...

> There's a reason he lost the 2020 election, but voters had 4 years to forget those reasons and look back with rose-colored glasses.

So many people forget that Joe Biden did, in fact, defeat Donald Trump.


And that covid happened and made everyone mad and kicked out the incumbents in every major election in the world.

Trudeau got a lot of hate, but won next election. But your point stands, covid was turning point in Trudeau's popularity, Liberal's kept power between Trudeau stepping down more gracefully than Biden, Carney being a very centralist candidate (it's a compliment when your opposition is down to accusing you of stealing their policy ideas), & Trump's recent victory giving many the ick towards Poilievre

Sometime around 2016 everyone learned that “corrupt” was just some synonym of “bad” and here we are, showered in a repeat of an administration of endless actual corruption.

WSJ did a good explainer on hotel room design anti-patterns: https://youtu.be/116cwKs2XQs

Kendra Gaylord released a video on the topic yesterday too.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QFPGUTyo9Yk


I watched this and it doesn't seem like anti-patterns to me? I spend more time in hotels than most and ironing boards, closets, minibars, and "bigger rooms" are not things I care about. I don't hang out in the room; it's a box I enter to shower and sleep.

It depends on the market you're aiming for.

A younger, lone traveller staying 2-3 nights is probably going to be out doing things in the day, and in the evening. And they won't have much luggage either.

Elderly travellers might not have the same level of energy; they might prefer to spend a few hours quietly relaxing with a book. And they might want an armchair per person, rather than sitting on the bed to read.

Business travellers might need somewhere to set up a laptop and work from, power, decent internet connectivity, and someplace they can iron some shirts.

Longer-term travellers (e.g. someone visiting a city to supervise like the building of a warehouse) will have more luggage, and they'll want to make themselves a bit more at home - they won't be out on the town every night for a month. They're more likely to use the hotel gym.

For some people, holidays are all about relaxing and doing things at a leisurely pace. Perhaps they want to spend the morning sitting on a balcony reading the newspaper - if you have a balcony.

For couples on honeymoon, they might want a nice room with a great bed.

Families might have two children and two adults sharing a room, with the children going to bed earlier and the adults sorta hanging out nearby; in this market, the hotel room sofa might fold out into two beds suitable for under-10s.

And of course, if you want to target all of these markets at the same time you end up with the classic cluttered hotel room with wardrobe, desk, desk chair, armchair, bedside tables, reading lamp, ironing board, TV, etc etc etc


For me, in addition to a clean comfortable bed, and a good shower (I don't like a deep bathtub I need to step into), I like having a desk and at least a comfortable chair (ideally a sofa).

Of course, now we're getting into a fair fit of space in a dense city.


I don't hang out in my hotel rooms either, but an iron, ironing board, and closet with hangars help me not look like a slob when I want to put on some nice clothes and go out for the evening.

Things I want, Socket next to bed, light switch next to bed, decent mattress and pillow, blackout blinds, no noise from next door/corridor

I do like a good shower too, rather than those stupid bath things like it’s the 1980s, and get rid of American hotels which seem to be allergic to providing shower gel


It blows my mind that sockets on the nightstand aren’t standard by now.

I just stayed at the Westin in Rome, supposedly a 5 star place, but I don’t think it’s been updated in 30 years. I had to move the nightstand and unplug a lamp, so I could plug my phone in next to the bed. So go get my phone socket I had to lose the lamp. It didn’t even have an alarm clock on the nightstand; there would have been nowhere to plug it in. Maybe they expect everyone to get a wake up call, but the phone was across the room too.

I used to travel with a little power strip, but stopped since I never actually used it. That place needed one badly.

It did have bathroom door though, so it had that going for it.


> I just stayed at the Westin in Rome, supposedly a 5 star place, but I don’t think it’s been updated in 30 years

Nobody comes and takes your stars away. They earned them once and they're still using them.


The stars are typically assigned based on silly checklists anyway, that’s how you end up with “4-star” $2000+/night Aman properties.

> Maybe they expect everyone to get a wake up call, but the phone was across the room too.

For a wakeup call, that's an advantage.


When I use to travel for work, I exclusively stayed in Embassy Suites because it didn’t feel like a shoebox and it gave me space to decompress after a full day of active like I like people.

Even now that I work remotely, my wife and I might spend a week back home in Atlanta where our adult children and friends live. We “live” in the hotel like we live at home. I’m usually working during the day, she might hang out with other friends who don’t work during the day and we plan things at night.

It’s really nice to have the space of a Hyatt House/Homewood Suites.

Even when we go on vacation we don’t have a jam packed scheduled where we have to be doing something every minute.


I recently read Central Banking 101¹ and learned a lot!

¹ https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/56863052


The number one thing keeping me on macOS is Universal Clipboard with my iPhone. I copy+paste URLs, 2FA codes, and images between devices all day long.

This is my favorite feature of KDE Connect on Linux.

KDE Connect can integrate seamlessly with iPhones?

Presumably, with some fanangling. I use Android these days so I'm not sure how hard Apple makes it.

I don't know about "seamlessly", but yeah, it works.

> really they're just stating a fact about the world, human nature, or geopolitics.

This seems to be a very common issue on HN, I've noticed. People are constantly conflating their perception of something with how it objectively is.


> poetic formatting can reliably bypass alignment constraints

Earlier this year I wrote about a similar idea in "Music to Break Models By"

https://matthodges.com/posts/2025-08-26-music-to-break-model...


T-bills produce yield.

> Are there for example, firms that will look at the unredacted content as a third party with confidentiality agreements, to certify that it is correctly being redacted?

No. But there are investigative reporters.


Not entirely accurate.

The government uses "special masters" or "taint teams" if there's a scenario like this, at times. One was involved in the Trump Mar-a-Lago case.

https://www.americanbar.org/groups/litigation/resources/news...


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