> those doing supply chain attacks are often at least somewhat professional and take precautions.
Not really.
The vast majority of supply chain attacks in practice are idiots exploiting namespacing, bitflips, or typos on pypi/npm to drop miners or infostealers.
Yes, even the shit tier supply chain attacks count :)
I'd suggest that this perspective is tainted by the association in the United States between home schooling and religious separatism. Home schooling in Europe (and in some places in the US) is much more often about parents coming together to provide a safer, less structured, less authoritarian, more project based space for their kids to learn. Check out the unschooling movement - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unschooling#:~:text=Unschoolin....
It’s also tainted by authoritarian regimes indoctrinating people to believe the only ones capable of teaching the children are the aforementioned regimes.
I know many home schooled children. I see no evidence of poor social development. In fact I see more emotional scars left by bad interactions at public schools than I do from homeschooling.
Careful about your experience representing a biased sample. For children who had poor social development likely resulted in less likelihood of knowing you at all.
If that was truly the reason why, and not a convenient excuse, then governments would state mandate social activities and not take children from their parents, which would be just as abusive.
Instead, it’s all about mandating government control over children.
In many cases public school cripples a child’s social development and leaves them with anxiety, shame, and other social hang ups for the rest of their life.
Customs in the EU have massively cracked down on imports from China in the last couple of years, with new regulations regarding import charges etc.
Every single package I've ordered since then across four different EU countries and multiple Chinese suppliers has resulted in it being held until a fee was paid.
Previously, stuff below a certain value was "free".
I did just make up 2 categories who use Linux at home, from the air I've been breathing for my 30+ years of working with people who run Linux at home. That is how opinions based on experience work. Do you have a point to make besides "I want to be contrarian which makes me superior?"
What comedown feelings did you experience?