That's why I'm on Chrome, because it's sandboxed. In November we'll be celebrating 10th anniversary of lagging behind IE if electrolysis isn't integrated into Firefox stable builds.
Or what if I link to a site that links to infringing content? I'm not allowed to share a link to www.illegalstuff.com, but can I link to www.totally-legal.co.uk, which has a link to illegalstuff.com? What if totally-legal.co.uk has a 302 redirect to illegalstuff.com? It totally-legal.co.uk an illegal link, even if that actual site doesn't contain illegal stuff?
I also really liked the nice package there for testing it out yourself, creating results package and clear email instructions for contributing the results.
Is there any good way of running these kinds of experiments on a variety of hardware possibly with other people's help?
Someone has to program a specific task for a specific robot. Then that can be copied over almost instantly all over the world to thousands or more physical robots.
Making a copy of the software for a robot can be considered as cheap as sending an e-mail. Hardware is hard, but that might change too in the near future.
I'd be interested in how the economics will work, since we already sometimes have silly pricing for software/music/eBooks. Piracy/DRM for robots?
I may host my own email server or I might pay someone to host it. Or the government could host it, or my university could host it. Or I could get it for free by agreeing to be served some ads.
But who pays for it doesn't matter. I can send you an email even if we use very different providers (from the point of view of both technology and payment). For messaging I don't see this yet.
I feel like XMPP was supposed to be the chosen one. I had a google account but chatted to my gmail contacts through my self-hosted jabber server. I wonder if this new generation of messaging apps will get to that point anytime soon.