This has been “down” for me for a few months now, ever since Google tied this functionality to the same toggle that opts you in for using your email data for AI training. So now you can’t filter this stuff without also agreeing to a whole swath of unrelated and opt-ins.
Ive since gone on an unsubscribe campaign, and things seem bearable now.
It works with most real companies. If you signed up for it, you can generally unsubscribe from it. It’s easy to do by mistake, and some default to yes with no option during sign up.
I don’t care about whatever new shows Netflix has. Unsubscribe.
I don’t care about my DNS registrar having a sale. Unsubscribe.
Google postmaster notices when you hit the one-click unsubscribe button and severely punishes senders that continue to send. It's worth using as long as you understand that some senders will never allow you to sign up again.
Not a lie, a potential misinterpretation if anything. Google has never factually countered the allegation, and now it’s before the courts in California. I’m going to wait and see how Thele v. Google plays out before turning this back on, and looking for alternatives in the meantime.
Something important that may be overlooked in the blog post is that for most bands you need licenses to transmit over the air. ISM bands are unlicensed but may come with other limitations (e.g., in some countries regulators require a listen-before-talk mechanism that is not always implemented in cellular stacks).
All the examples in the blogpost is areas where you own the property, and in most countries can deploy this if you are careful not to interfere with areas outside of your property. With 5G this is easier because you can use ISM bands within the “core” and WiFi closer to the edge.
OP here. You would need some hardware components to run a 5G stack, starting from servers to software-defined radios. Another challenge may be linked to spectrum licenses, unless you transmit/receive in unlicensed bands.
Generally, papers are published in conference proceedings or journals. Just look it up on Google and you will find the publication it belongs to, with the date: Volume 40 Issue 1, January 2010
https://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1672313