On Thu, Mar 28, 2024 at 9:56 PM Robert Ramey wrote:
On 3/28/24 5:38 PM, Andrey Semashev via Boost wrote:
On 3/28/24 23:42, Vinnie Falco via Boost wrote:
Not to worry. Technicians at The C++ Alliance are working on a mostly portable solution which uses the compiler's pragma message facility to embed a small piece of HTML containing a tracking cookie:
#pramga message( "<html><script>gtag('config', 'GA_TRACKING_ID', { 'anonymize_ip': true });</script><body></body></html>" )
Every time your library is compiled, the C++ Alliance cloud services will be contacted to collect non personally-identifiable information about what is being compiled, the versions of Boost C++ being used, and the quality of your implementation. Currently this capability only works when the program in question is built using an IDE such as Visual Studio or XCode but we are investigating patches to bjam to enable Internet communication during compilation.
This would be a massive privacy breach, if it works. If this ever comes to reality, please announce it on this list so that I never use those libraries.
+1 I can't imagine anyone willing to use a library which did that
It's too late. If your email client has opened that message above, the C++ Alliance is already inside your computer. Glen