We’ve not found any cases so far in our investigations where someone was looking intentionally for passwords, nor have we found signs of misuse of this data
That’s a bit like saying “we’ve had this telescope pointed at your bedroom window for years but no worries, we have no evidence anybody took pictures of you.”
I met some Facebook employees in one of my trips a couple of years ago, they were working in some of Facebook’s offices in the US, and they were making jokes pretending to be cool saying they could look at user’s private info, until a few of us in that chat raised it to them that was not really cool at all, so they changed their speech saying “…well, you may need some supervisor’s approval before being able to do so, but yeah…we can…”
Just added in a bit about how all Firefox addons have been disabled for anyone not running a dev build of Firefox. I also added as a fix a link to a whitepaper for the peer to peer public key infrastructure.
Under centralized DNS/Certification or something to that effect.
Oh, you assume I had a fix for that particular issue? That is not something I added, I added it as what the SAFE network would do to deal with this type of problem.
Let me find you some workarounds!