The article missed to mention the man in question had old (10 years ago) charges about stealing 264 guns to the police that were going to be used as evidence against a paramilitar group: link in Spanish.
Obviously, this doesn't justify the bombing against a stranded civillian target with a broken boat asking for help.
Given that guerrillas and narcotrafic has only grown bigger in the last few years, I'm very confident the situation has only got worse since 2023, sadly.
I think your best bet is emulation. I don't know how easy is it to emulate PS3, but PS2 is incredibly easy, and Gran Turismo 4 runs flawlessly that was.
I was confused about the app installation process. I though Android as a whole was prohibiting any installation of non Play Store apps (other than using adb), and since Graphene uses an external app store, they needed to come with a workaround.
My point was that Graphene uses non Play Store software, including an app store. But what I underestand from the comments is that the prohibition of software installation relies on Google Play Services, so Graphene is on the clear with that.
Quantum computers represent a complete paradigmatic. Modern quantum computers beat classical ones on some problems, while still not being able to factor some 2 digit numbers.
A single algorithm would be probable arrive some day, but why risk it right now? The Signal protocol adopted Post-Quantum some years ago. They going for a hybrid, not well tested over several years against classical computers, algorithm, would have been a security disaster.
That's not what I'm trying to say. I'm not saying apply 1000 classical algos on top of 1000 quantum algos. I'm saying that post-quantum needs to be an extra layer, not a replacement.
I think we both agree on the same thing, I comunicated it badly. The better approach is to apply a post-quantun algorithm on top of a classical one, so you are safe against both types of computers. The advantage of this approach is that you need to crack both algorithms at the same time.
NIST seems to prefers a hybrid approach, where a single algorithm is supposedly safe against both classical and quantum computers, leaving you with a single point of failure.
NIST doesn't need credibility, it simply needs to pass along NSA's aproval stamp for $next_algorithm, so $next_algorithm becomes a widely used standar.
You would need like 100 South Americas to have the same militar budget as US. That is ignoring the deep troubles the countries already have and are far, far more important over an arms race against the US.
They could also be directing thesis. They'll appear in their students papers on the topic. My professor was incresibly useful in mine, and I know he does this a lot.
I'm glad you liked it :)
It algo has a behing the scenes video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uX2ChU4010w