I always thought it was so tropey. It just doesn't strike me as thought-provoking if you can sum up something with "a parallel universe decided to release an evil version of me with an evil beard and nobody else to come from a parallel universe and frame me aboard my ship".
I also have no idea who he is and I also missed the point. It's just another "AI bad" article, even if the message this time is "AI bad, but not as bad as you think."
It's still mostly useless. You get one giant locked folder. You can't have multiple locked folders or categorize the contents within it in any way. You can't put photos in the locked folder into albums or search through them (by face, location, etc.) or even edit them.
You also can't share photos within the Locked Folder. But if they were already shared before being moved there, and you have backup enabled for Locked Folder, then they somehow remain shared?
What they really need to do is fix up the album feature.
Right now you can hide an album from your library, but only if you are already sharing that album in some way. And accessing them once hidden is unintuitive, because unless you already knew about that sharing requirement, how are you to know that they will still show up in the Sharing tab (and that they won't be hidden from there too like you would expect)? I hid one as a test and then had to Google how to find it again.
There should be a Locked Albums feature:
Albums hidden from Library and Sharing (unless you enable the toggle)
All photos in those albums hidden from Photos and Archive and Search (unless you enable the toggle)
Ross' team -- which includes Research Assistant Professor Giuseppe Coppotelli, biomedical and pharmaceutical sciences graduate student Lauren Gaspar, and Interdisciplinary Neuroscience Program graduate student Sydney Bartman -- exposed young and old mice to varying levels of microplastics in drinking water over the course of three weeks. They found that microplastic exposure induces both behavioral changes and alterations in immune markers in liver and brain tissues. The study mice began to move and behave peculiarly, exhibiting behaviors akin to dementia in humans. The results were even more profound in older animals.
Bro do you even oh-my-zsh bro?
Bro where are you goingggg...
/s