“collective wisdom” is basically a polite euphemism for groupthink and given that c level folks are all taking the same mba/sigma/cthulu worship courses it’s not surprising.
I have no programming skill at all and I don’t know a ton about ArchiveBox except I set it up and ran it for myself for a while, so I’m asking as an innocent, ignorant and curious geek, but is this something that could be adapted to peer to peer distribution or some other means of making it simultaneously as private and local as you want it and as distributed and bulletproof, uptime wise, as possible?
For a while it’s my experience that 1Password doesn’t play nicely with… anything. I’ve had issues on Orion, Firefox, Chrome, Brave, Edge and Safari across MacOS and Windows machines.
I still use FF, for now anyway, so I’m not trying to be a dick here, but we’re talking less than 4% market share, so it’s hard to fault a small team for prioritizing the 82% they get with Chrome+Safari
I quite often wonder about those stats... I mean - most of Firefox users are quire conscious about privacy/tracking so most likely they have it blocked which... would "disappear" them from the stats? Chrome/Safari users mostly don't give a darn (and blocking is getting more difficult) so they would usually balloon the stats? Not to mention sites usually working just fine in Firefox but doing dumb detection hence users often hiding UserAgent?
Yes Firefox user here. I hide my useragent too because of stupid sites like Microsoft 365 that disable a lot of functionality for Firefox but everything works totally fine if they think I'm using edge. The same skulduggery that Google used on Gmail to make chrome big.