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第 37/84 页 · 共 1,000 条
发布 5月8日
You Can Get $35 in Google Store Credit If You Preorder the Fitbit Air via Lifehacker (author: Naima Karp)
发布 5月8日
These Are The Best Ways to Rid Your Gmail Inbox of Spam Gmail does a decent job at filtering junk mail to the Spam folder, but there are always the marketing emails, newsletters, and other mass messages that slip through to your inbox. Maybe you accidentally signed up for a mailing list, or you wanted those promo emails at one point, but now they've become too much. You can keep deleting them one by one—or you can take action to remove spam from certain senders once and for all. Set up filtering to banish unwanted emails Filtering is one of our favorite Gmail hacks for moving junk emails straight to the trash. Select the messages in your inbox from as many senders as you want to filter out, click the three-dot menu at the top of the screen, and select Filter messages like these. On the pop-up, click Create filter and check Delete it. Be sure to also check Also apply filter to [X] matching conversations. Future emails from filtered senders will automatically go to Trash. Filter entire domains instead If you're still getting emails from a sender you've filtered out, it may be because they're using multiple aliases on the same domain. To solve this, you can set up a filter for an entire domain. Go to Settings > See all settings > Filters and Blocked Addresses and select Create a new filter. Add the domain (@[domain].com) to the "From" field, select Create filter, and check Delete it. Unsubscribe en masse via 'Manage Subscriptions' You can unsubscribe from mailing lists by clicking "Unsubscribe" at the bottom of each individual email you receive, but this is both tedious and a potential security risk, as threat actors have been known to hijack these links for malicious purposes. At minimum, opening the email and clicking any link therein confirms that your email address is active and ripe for targeting. Google updated Gmail last year to include a "Manage Subscription" view, which centralizes mailing list and promotional emails in one place with a one-click unsubscribe option. In the left-hand navigation bar, click More > Manage subscriptions, locate the sender, and click Unsubscribe to be removed from that sender's list. Note that Gmail may not pull all email campaigns into this view—if that's the case for a list you want to unsubscribe from, you can click Unsubscribe at the top of the email itself (next to the sender's address) instead or use the next step to block the sender entirely. Use the 'Report spam' button ruthlessly If you find yourself deleting emails from the same senders over and over, report them as spam instead. This helps Gmail to recognize these and similar messages as junk, which over time can reduce how much clutter actually reaches your inbox. Select the email and click the Report spam button at the top of your inbox to move the message to your spam folder. Gmail automatically deletes spam after 30 days. Block external images to prevent tracking Marketing emails typically have tracking pixels—invisible 1x1 images used to monitor online activity—embedded that let senders know when you open a message, which is why you should stop opening emails you don't want and use one of the above strategies to filter, delete, or block them instead. To add an extra layer of protection, you can keep external images from loading in emails unless you explicitly allow them. Go to Settings > See all settings. On the General tab, scroll to Images and select Ask before displaying external images. Keep your email address private and use aliases instead An obvious way to keep junk from reaching your inbox is to avoid giving out your email address in the first place. You can create a second Gmail account to use solely for subscriptions, shopping, service sign-ups, etc. so any lists you are added to are directed straight to a separate inbox. Gmail also has unlimited aliases via "plus addressing," so you can easily see where spam is coming from. Or you can create burner accounts via "hide my email" services in browsers, password managers, or Apple iCloud. via Lifehacker (author: Emily Long)
发布 5月8日
Here’s My Ultimate Checklist for Training and Running a Race With a Garmin Watch via Lifehacker (author: Meredith Dietz)
发布 5月8日
My Favorite Bone-Conduction Headphones Are $40 Off Right Now via Lifehacker (author: Daniel Oropeza)
发布 5月8日
10 Shows Like 'Beef' You Should Watch Next via Lifehacker (author: Ross Johnson)
发布 5月8日
10 Shows Like 'Beef' You Should Watch Next via Lifehacker (author: Ross Johnson)
发布 5月8日
Your Instagram Conversations Won’t Be so Private Anymore Before you send your next Instagram DM, be warned: Whatever you share with that friend, influencer, or business could potentially be seen by anyone—including but not limited to hackers, law enforcement, or even Meta itself. As of today, May 8, 2026, Instagram DMs are no longer end-to-end encrypted (E2EE). Your messages are vulnerable, whether you're discussing a reel you saw, or sharing your Social Security number. (Please don't do this.) E2EE is necessary for any messaging service that wants to protect its users' privacy. This level of encryption ensures that the only people who can read the contents of a conversation are the ones with access to the devices involved. When you send a message over E2EE, the program encrypts, or "scrambles," it. Each device contains a "key" to decrypt, or "unscramble" the message. If you try to intercept the message without the key, all you'll see is a mess of code. Even Meta couldn't read your encrypted Instagram DMs in the past, which makes this change frustrating. Why is Meta taking away E2EE on Instagram? It's not clear why Meta is taking this drastic step. In fact, the company has yet to publicly announce it, despite the change going into effect today. Instead, back in March, Meta quietly updated an Instagram help page to note the new policy, writing "end-to-end encrypted messaging on Instagram will no longer be supported after May 8, 2026." Meta advised users to download chats that may be impacted, and that they might need to update Instagram to do so. Other than that, however, the company has been mute on the policy shift. What's more, Instagram has spent the past seven years on a crusade to offer E2EE on all of its major messaging platforms. WhatsApp has always offered encrypted messaging, but the company also brought E2EE to Instagram and Facebook Messenger. There are critics of E2EE out there, including those who argue that the tech makes it more difficult to protect children on the platform. Meta has had a poor track record for how it handles underage users on its platforms, so perhaps it's feeling the pressure to change. But while it's true that ending E2EE means it's easier to track the conversations that minors are having on Instagram, it is now also easier to track anyone's chats. Governments and law enforcement will likely celebrate the change, but anyone who cares about user privacy will not. Should you stop using Instagram DMs? If you're a die-hard privacy fan, sure, you won't want to use Instagram for messaging any longer. (In fact, you may want to ditch Meta apps as much as possible.) But Instagram is far from the only insecure messaging platform out there. If you have an iPhone and text Android users (or vice versa), your texts are not encrypted (at least not until Apple starts supporting RCS E2EE with iOS 26.5); if you use Telegram without "Secret Chats," your messages are not E2EE; if you use Group Me, Discord, Google Chat, or any number of popular messaging apps, your conversations are not totally private. That doesn't mean you need to stop using these apps, but you should understand the privacy and security implications. Without E2EE, your conversations are accessible by the company that hosts the app, and may be accessible by anyone who requests your data or seeks it by force. As such, don't rely on Instagram DMs for anything sensitive. Don't share details you wouldn't be comfortable discussing in public, or that you wouldn't want Instagram (or a hacker) to see. That could include financial information, corporate secrets, Social Security numbers, etc. For now, it might be best to treat Instagram DMs as a place to discuss Instagram. "Here's a fun reel I found;" "look at this picture;" "have you seen this account?" For all serious conversations, turn to an E2EE app—perhaps one of Meta's, or something like iMessage or Signal. via Lifehacker (author: Jake Peterson)
发布 5月8日
Your Instagram Conversations Won’t Be so Private Anymore Before you send your next Instagram DM, be warned: Whatever you share with that friend, influencer, or business could potentially be seen by anyone—including but not limited to hackers, law enforcement, or even Meta itself. As of today, May 8, 2026, Instagram DMs are no longer end-to-end encrypted (E2EE). Your messages are vulnerable, whether you're discussing a reel you saw, or sharing your Social Security number. (Please don't do this.) E2EE is necessary for any messaging service that wants to protect its users' privacy. This level of encryption ensures that the only people who can read the contents of a conversation are the ones with access to the devices involved. When you send a message over E2EE, the program encrypts, or "scrambles," it. Each device contains a "key" to decrypt, or "unscramble" the message. If you try to intercept the message without the key, all you'll see is a mess of code. Even Meta couldn't read your encrypted Instagram DMs in the past, which makes this change frustrating. Why is Meta taking away E2EE on Instagram? It's not clear why Meta is taking this drastic step. In fact, the company has yet to publicly announce it, despite the change going into effect today. Instead, back in March, Meta quietly updated an Instagram help page to note the new policy, writing "end-to-end encrypted messaging on Instagram will no longer be supported after May 8, 2026." Meta advised users to download chats that may be impacted, and that they might need to update Instagram to do so. Other than that, however, the company has been mute on the policy shift. What's more, Instagram has spent the past seven years on a crusade to offer E2EE on all of its major messaging platforms. WhatsApp has always offered encrypted messaging, but the company also brought E2EE to Instagram and Facebook Messenger. There are critics of E2EE out there, including those who argue that the tech makes it more difficult to protect children on the platform. Meta has had a poor track record for how it handles underage users on its platforms, so perhaps it's feeling the pressure to change. But while it's true that ending E2EE means it's easier to track the conversations that minors are having on Instagram, it is now also easier to track anyone's chats. Governments and law enforcement will likely celebrate the change, but anyone who cares about user privacy will not. Should you stop using Instagram DMs? If you're a die-hard privacy fan, sure, you won't want to use Instagram for messaging any longer. (In fact, you may want to ditch Meta apps as much as possible.) But Instagram is far from the only insecure messaging platform out there. If you have an iPhone and text Android users (or vice versa), your texts are not encrypted (at least not until Apple starts supporting RCS E2EE with iOS 26.5); if you use Telegram without "Secret Chats," your messages are not E2EE; if you use Group Me, Discord, Google Chat, or any number of popular messaging apps, your conversations are not totally private. That doesn't mean you need to stop using these apps, but you should understand the privacy and security implications. Without E2EE, your conversations are accessible by the company that hosts the app, and may be accessible by anyone who requests your data or seeks it by force. As such, don't rely on Instagram DMs for anything sensitive. Don't share details you wouldn't be comfortable discussing in public, or that you wouldn't want Instagram (or a hacker) to see. That could include financial information, corporate secrets, Social Security numbers, etc. For now, it might be best to treat Instagram DMs as a place to discuss Instagram. "Here's a fun reel I found;" "look at this picture;" "have you seen this account?" For all serious conversations, turn to an E2EE app—perhaps one of Meta's, or something like iMessage or Signal. via Lifehacker (author: Jake Peterson)
发布 5月8日
Nintendo Is Raising the Price of the Nintendo Switch 2 via Lifehacker (author: Jake Peterson)
发布 5月8日
这个动辄千万级利润的名利场,一切有关人性的考验都可以在这里尝试 (评论: 影后) Oz评论: 影后 评价: 还行 via 豆瓣最受欢迎的影评 (author: Oz)
发布 5月8日
These Soundcore ANC Earbuds Are 50% Off Right Now via Lifehacker (author: Pradershika Sharma)
发布 5月8日
The Feature-Packed Pixel Buds 2a Are $20 Off Right Now via Lifehacker (author: Pradershika Sharma)