I would guess the most dangerous offender is Apple for the sheer fact people think they are protecting their privacy, so they take less precautions, yet somehow Apples advertising revenue keeps setting records 😅
Apple has never and will never sell you data. Steve Jobs had made it perfectly clear that they make a lot of money and there is no need for them to sell data
From simple Google search it seems Apple ads does not share the customer data with third parties, unlike fb or Google. Apple’s other services may send to third parties is but the data is anonymized with a random id.
@@MasterKey2004 No no no, when they have the information to create a profile of you, it ain't very anonymous now isn' t it? The information can still be organized to create a profile. They don't need a clear identity to do that. They got algorithms to do that. Although apple isn't the worst of the bunch, they are still very much bad.
Fortunately, Oracle is not very well integrated between its units. I am using one of its SaaS software, and my user ID doesn't work on the separate training & learning portal for that same software. Also, after an upgrade, they lost my login data for that training portal. It's like you needing separate Google accounts for Gmail, Google Maps, and other Google services.
Maybe they just don't care about the user experience as much and in the database they still have all this information but just don't use it for their products.
@@raandomplayer8589 Most people use the same passwords across products. A flaw in one among hundreds of login systems could be the reason for a massive data breach across all of them.
Oracle is basically a data base company, guess what a database stores, its data. The question is does Oracle sell that data to make money, the answer is no, at least currently. I also doubt Oracle has access to the same level of detailed individual data that apple has for its customer. Finally the main access point is its cloud environment, which is not as large as Amazon’s cloud environment. Most of the user data is controlled by the users of its product in their own data centres.
Star Division (StarOffice which was reworked into OpenOffice) and Innotek (VirtualBox) were acquired by Sun Microsystems, who in turn were acquired by Oracle, so those acquisitions weren't direct.
Yeap, the community pushback was highly successful and the forks are thriving while acquisitions are stagnating. I don’t see anybody forking virtual box, but that’s probably because most people are switching to qemu
OpenJDK, MySQL, Oracle Linux... Oracle not just gets data. They laso give you the tools to compete against them and they learned in the hard way with their loss of OpenOffice as an open-source project.
Yeah well they can't just go around and rescind projects once they were made available. Even if they are trying oh so very hard, which is the very reason they lost control btw, because many people don't trust them. Btw. you forgot OpenZFS. And Oracle Linus is dar from being anything original, all the others are acquisitions that didn't originate at Oracle but just other services they acquired and where they basically shut down most development thereafter.
@@eugenesmirnov252 What CentOS has to do with Oracle? CentOS is an open source version of Redhat Linux Enterprise, which was developed by Redhat (IBM).
I remember when i was still a kid at primary school i first heard of java back then one day at one of those gigantic retro computers there was oracle installed and it's opening loader displays that more than 4 billion devices use oracle
"Ellison made the presentation almost a year after the launch of ID Graph. “How many people are on Earth? Seven billion,” Ellison said at the time. “Two billion to go.”" www.spiceworks.com/it-security/data-security/news/oracle-class-action-lawsuit/
You know why Oracle tried to buy apple in 1997, because Steve jobs and Larry Ellison were very good friends, they used to go hiking together. Larry used to come up with new plans to get Steve back into apple. He told Steve that he would buy the company and make Steve it's ceo. Steve said no to him though.
Not only this after Jobs return, Larry was appointed a director in Apple he resigned in 2001. Steve Jobs was the photographer in Larry Ellisons 4th marriage.
once upon a time cia was interested in sql database, sql was invented by ibm and its concept was published in their booklet called ibm system journal, available to anybody. larry ellison picked it up and implemented it with his friends while ibm did nothing about it. larry ellison loves japan and her culture as some photo on this video shows. i saw him presenting oracle products in data show held in tokyo bay area back in 1990's. before the turn of the century, i visited oracle campus in silicon valley, which was huge with database-shaped buildings as this video shows. --- ibm gave away billions for free.
Your videos are a wonderful study of business and human nature. The detail and production quality are brilliant. It's obvious you and your team, if any, work very hard to produce quality. It's very enjoyable. Thank you.
10:35 Cookies, location, on top of emails. If there's no strong government audit across their division, it's not difficult to cross check the data. They can't be boasting 5B users without removing duplicates.
Everything. Banks, government agencies, ecommerce sites, international groups, healthcare providers, telecolm, everyone uses Oracle at some level of their system. Only way to not sell your data to Oracle is to be completely off the grid
@@beaku3 but human themself is a database once interact with people outside then you give up your data entirety well human brain it not perfect but where the hell we get idea of a data than the human brain itself
doesn't the US gov have contracts with Oracle regarding the use and access of this data? dating back to the 90's? agencies such as NSA and homeland security? and eve. before that the NCIS system ?
Sun Microsystems was their most notable acquisition to me, I wanted to collect Solaris system ever since... *Larry is one of these rich dude who don't age, he's probably juiced up on stem cells, he's not about to quit.
The problem with their "pc" product in the 90s is that it didn't cost significantly less, eliminating their main sales claim; later, they would switch to total cost of ownership as an attempt to defect from the high price of their "stripped-down" product. Honestly, though, they were wise to get out of the hardware space where they clearly had no business, or expertise, to be leveraged. It's just a pity they helped euthanize Sun in the process.
Quick question: I get that 5B people use Oracle, but how can Oracle have data on those users? When I create a login to an Oracle db for example, I don't share with Oracle. Each user doesn't. How do they gather than info on specific users.
They collect your cookies that you agree to share on their sites, they get data from other companies who have data about you. You may be giving them data at this very moment through some services they made, you aren't aware of.
Because a company runs an Oracle database does not mean that Oracle has access to the data. I fail to see how Oracle should get access to the detail of information you suggest, on 5 billion people.
They are all working in sync. Just 2 nights before, I was downloading a movie from YTS and to my surprise last night when I opened my prime video account on TV, exactly those 2 movies popped up in front of me.
I did a half year placement in the council I worked at as a HR assistant and I know loads of the information I would action in on the council servers are actually as well, using Oracle so essentially all 2000+ employees there as well as any others too such as emergency contacts and whatnot, Oracle definitely has the data of too
But how do they have access to all that data? Can Oracle see the content of their customers' databases? Isn't the database of each company running locally on their own servers?
I waited through the whole video for an explanation of how Oracle was getting this data, and it was never explained. If any of the data that I work with ever leaked to the software vendor there would be hell to pay.
Hey dude, love your channel and have been a fan for a long time. I was wondering if u could do a video about yourself at some point. U do lots of histories of companies and explaining events but I’m curious about how you got your start and why your interested in what you are. I think it would be a cool idea to let us know some more about ya
Really appreciate the support Alfie! Though a bit outdated, I do have a video like that from late 2021. It's called something like Who Is Logically Answered.
@@LogicallyAnswered just watched it! Great to know more about u Hari, has your plans changed much since then? And u know ur right I think I’m going to start a yt channel this month, I’ve been wanting to for years
Just stopping by to say that Oracle is a disgusting company and while it'd take a lot of nice technologies with it - all of which they bought so there's that- if be happy to see them go bancrupt tomorrow. Oracle SQL - which is separate from MySQL which they acquired - is one of the worst SQL implementations around. Under their thumb many Sun projects withered including Java which just stopped really evolving for a good decade after they bought Sun, and they litigated like crazy against not only Google with Android in the process causing them to adopt Kotlin - a case btw which, if they had really won it, would've gone ahead and destroyed the entire current software development approach and basically forced every software piece to be incompatible with each other for fear of litigation - but are also threatening non profit work like OpenZFS.
I like how when you say that which company do you think violates your privacy the most and than I think of facebook being the one who does that and great video man :]
I never knew this and knew of the company this is nuts because I thought Google and such as Apple were huge bur seeing how much data this company has compared to other companies is making me wonder how do they have that much compared to them
I got here from another video from the author, and 1st thing that caught my eye is the use of term "Violate your privacy", which would imply they are doing it without your knowledge BUT you have accepted them doing that, so it is would not violation but encroachment the bit lesser one of the two.
This is a digital age. Companies don’t even care about our Privacy. Even What’sApp that was built on Privacy, still has some of our personal data. So yeah, it’s not new.
Well have you learn through out history we collect data way way way back in the old day i mean realy old day it isn't new plus you give up your data when you use the internet have people ever think about that?
Plus when you interact with people they also collect your data when sell thing the buyer will collect data so next time you can buy her/she products without need of remembering her name and tell your name again to the seller
I’m not on social media anymore. However I’m on TH-cam & google is in everything. I have an iPhone still & WiFi in my house. Like it’s really no escaping unless u off the grid grid & zero electricity.
Soo, this would imply that oracles software for on premise software or private cloud installations would always phone hone to Oracle and leak out all of its corporate customer data. Sure, I can see it technically happening if one uses their SaaS solutions and their cloud. If those allegations would turn out to be true. Then the whole Cambridge Analytica scandal would be just a "fart in the wind"...
"2 billion to go" is like a supervillain dialog LOL
More like 3 billion now
Honestly it would make an EXCELLENT line in a movie
Like if you told me that was a famous movie quote I’d believe you
Now it's 3 billion so plus 1 billion more to go.
Are we counting clones?
Test tube babies count? Curious
Tech companies know more about me than my government does. Even scarier, they probably know more about me than I, myself do.
Hahaha. They know what you want before you do.
You're underestimating how much spying the government does
@@hungerfan552 I'm not in the US and I don't think my govt. can spy to the same extent as these companies.
@@LogicallyAnswered terrifying
Reminds me of Harrari's book Homo Deus
now, if only they made their documentation easier to read
Hahaha
Or their products easy to use and administer
or didnt require accounts to download stuff
As someone who is learning Java I can say their documentation is hard to understand.
Privacy is an illusion at this point
not really, it's just a matter of what you're willing to do. most people lack such a will.
If I create a secret code or change the meaning of words, do I have privacy?
Once you access the internet, its all over.
@@spicychad55 yeah, living under developing world conditions just to have privacy isn't worth it
it's alway been
The greatest trick the Devil ever pulled was convincing the world he didn't exist.
Except he doesn’t.
@@coolinmac it's a line from a movie
@@coolinmac I feel like you missed the point
Devil does exist btw
Vy5dtyfrrthcxffrtgvbfdonmkgydvvtuvhcubjgibouyjgfuhkgu
@@coolinmac oh god he got someone
I would guess the most dangerous offender is Apple for the sheer fact people think they are protecting their privacy, so they take less precautions, yet somehow Apples advertising revenue keeps setting records 😅
What complete and utter nonsense. You’re talking garbage mate.
Apple has never and will never sell you data. Steve Jobs had made it perfectly clear that they make a lot of money and there is no need for them to sell data
From simple Google search it seems Apple ads does not share the customer data with third parties, unlike fb or Google. Apple’s other services may send to third parties is but the data is anonymized with a random id.
@RBkeyZ yeah but that data is anonymous, privacy is violated when your personal data is sold to data brokers with your identity
@@MasterKey2004 No no no, when they have the information to create a profile of you, it ain't very anonymous now isn'
t it? The information can still be organized to create a profile. They don't need a clear identity to do that. They got algorithms to do that. Although apple isn't the worst of the bunch, they are still very much bad.
Fortunately, Oracle is not very well integrated between its units. I am using one of its SaaS software, and my user ID doesn't work on the separate training & learning portal for that same software. Also, after an upgrade, they lost my login data for that training portal.
It's like you needing separate Google accounts for Gmail, Google Maps, and other Google services.
Maybe they just don't care about the user experience as much and in the database they still have all this information but just don't use it for their products.
@@Xyles7that kinda makes it safe? It's like giving credit card info to a caveman.
@@raandomplayer8589 Most people use the same passwords across products. A flaw in one among hundreds of login systems could be the reason for a massive data breach across all of them.
@Raandom Player If the caveman is too dumb to commit fraud with your credit card info, then it's kind of safe...
What's funny is the US military also forgot oracle existed and was shocked when they put a bid in and won for the US military cloud system
Oracle is what many back end of websites need to operate so they will do well.
wow, i'd heard of oracle in the past, but i had no idea they were _this_ huge, sinister and unstoppable
I've used Oracle for a virtual machine, and have heard of them every now and then, but never knew they were this powerful!
same
Oracle is basically a data base company, guess what a database stores, its data. The question is does Oracle sell that data to make money, the answer is no, at least currently. I also doubt Oracle has access to the same level of detailed individual data that apple has for its customer. Finally the main access point is its cloud environment, which is not as large as Amazon’s cloud environment. Most of the user data is controlled by the users of its product in their own data centres.
I still don't get how they collect our data if all they do is provide services to other companies?
Worth to mention some other notable acquisitions: open office, virtual box, mysql, and Berkeley DB
Star Division (StarOffice which was reworked into OpenOffice) and Innotek (VirtualBox) were acquired by Sun Microsystems, who in turn were acquired by Oracle, so those acquisitions weren't direct.
Libre office is where it at
@@messycode7738
I agree.
Yeap, the community pushback was highly successful and the forks are thriving while acquisitions are stagnating. I don’t see anybody forking virtual box, but that’s probably because most people are switching to qemu
@@kbhasi what about onlyoffice
Their stock price did not even fall that much like other tech giants
Oracle is like the kid from your class you forgot existed expect that kid knows everything about you
...and the author omitted the fact that most SAP instances store all their data .... on an Oracle database.
OpenJDK, MySQL, Oracle Linux... Oracle not just gets data. They laso give you the tools to compete against them and they learned in the hard way with their loss of OpenOffice as an open-source project.
Yeah well they can't just go around and rescind projects once they were made available. Even if they are trying oh so very hard, which is the very reason they lost control btw, because many people don't trust them. Btw. you forgot OpenZFS.
And Oracle Linus is dar from being anything original, all the others are acquisitions that didn't originate at Oracle but just other services they acquired and where they basically shut down most development thereafter.
Sealing the fate of java and centos - this deserves discussion in this vid.
@@eugenesmirnov252 What CentOS has to do with Oracle? CentOS is an open source version of Redhat Linux Enterprise, which was developed by Redhat (IBM).
@@infastin3795 it's dead. Just that.
@@eugenesmirnov252 AlmaLinux is alive. Pretty much the same.
I remember when i was still a kid at primary school i first heard of java back then one day at one of those gigantic retro computers there was oracle installed and it's opening loader displays that more than 4 billion devices use oracle
And installed pretty much everywhere ,from you phone even car.
Oracle: “We have missing data on about 3 billion subjects, how do we correct this”
Literally the rest of the population without internet or those trying to hide from Oracle, just sell them new products so they add to the statistic!
Java runs on a lot more then 3 billion devices since 2000, that’s for sure
they didn't update the loading screen since 2000's
Hahaha both facts
They didn't even try to hide it.
"how many people are there on earth. 5 billion? 2 more to go" that qoute is INSANE.
But I can't find it. Where did he say it 😂
"Ellison made the presentation almost a year after the launch of ID Graph. “How many people are on Earth? Seven billion,” Ellison said at the time. “Two billion to go.”"
www.spiceworks.com/it-security/data-security/news/oracle-class-action-lawsuit/
You know why Oracle tried to buy apple in 1997, because Steve jobs and Larry Ellison were very good friends, they used to go hiking together. Larry used to come up with new plans to get Steve back into apple. He told Steve that he would buy the company and make Steve it's ceo. Steve said no to him though.
Not only this after Jobs return, Larry was appointed a director in Apple he resigned in 2001. Steve Jobs was the photographer in Larry Ellisons 4th marriage.
once upon a time cia was interested in sql database, sql was invented by ibm and its concept was published in their booklet called ibm system journal, available to anybody. larry ellison picked it up and implemented it with his friends while ibm did nothing about it. larry ellison loves japan and her culture as some photo on this video shows. i saw him presenting oracle products in data show held in tokyo bay area back in 1990's. before the turn of the century, i visited oracle campus in silicon valley, which was huge with database-shaped buildings as this video shows. --- ibm gave away billions for free.
IBM's not perfect either hahaha, but way better than Xerox
thank god sap is an option that is preferable to big companies that would otherwise go with oracle
Your videos are a wonderful study of business and human nature.
The detail and production quality are brilliant.
It's obvious you and your team, if any, work very hard to produce quality.
It's very enjoyable. Thank you.
Thank you so much Sam!
Dude...thank you... again we are lucky to share your passion mate.
@@LogicallyAnswered - I formally confirm. Between the trash floating on the web it's always a pleasure to see you "documentary".
Grtz
Unfortunately the narration sucks, dude speaks shyly as if he is in a dungeon
Can you please mention, how are they collecting the data?
As in, from which services that the common person uses?
10:35
Cookies, location, on top of emails. If there's no strong government audit across their division, it's not difficult to cross check the data. They can't be boasting 5B users without removing duplicates.
Everything. Banks, government agencies, ecommerce sites, international groups, healthcare providers, telecolm, everyone uses Oracle at some level of their system. Only way to not sell your data to Oracle is to be completely off the grid
@@beaku3 but human themself is a database once interact with people outside then you give up your data entirety well human brain it not perfect but where the hell we get idea of a data than the human brain itself
doesn't the US gov have contracts with Oracle regarding the use and access of this data? dating back to the 90's? agencies such as NSA and homeland security? and eve. before that the NCIS system ?
Sun Microsystems was their most notable acquisition to me, I wanted to collect Solaris system ever since...
*Larry is one of these rich dude who don't age, he's probably juiced up on stem cells, he's not about to quit.
The problem with their "pc" product in the 90s is that it didn't cost significantly less, eliminating their main sales claim; later, they would switch to total cost of ownership as an attempt to defect from the high price of their "stripped-down" product. Honestly, though, they were wise to get out of the hardware space where they clearly had no business, or expertise, to be leveraged. It's just a pity they helped euthanize Sun in the process.
just an fyi, the screenshot at 1:44 is actually of Javascript, NOT Java. Javascript is not owned by Oracle.
Can't believe you missed Cerner! Which is most critical acquisition in this context!!
5B users ≠ 5B people
There's an old joke. The difference between God and Larry Ellison is that God doesn’t think he's Larry Ellison.
Hahaha
it's time to start companies that makes companies
we will be able to collect data from the companies
Once again love the video keep up the work
Thank you Ridwan!
Quick question: I get that 5B people use Oracle, but how can Oracle have data on those users? When I create a login to an Oracle db for example, I don't share with Oracle. Each user doesn't. How do they gather than info on specific users.
They collect your cookies that you agree to share on their sites, they get data from other companies who have data about you. You may be giving them data at this very moment through some services they made, you aren't aware of.
@@CasperNotGhost How are they collecting cookies if you use their db? There is no web browser involved in any way.
*So oracle gathered 5B user data based off of JAVA? how does that work if the programmers don't hard code a code to gather people's data?*
So the video said through cookies and pixels, but are websites forced to implement oracle cookies/pixels?
Not through JAVA alone but through all of the backend software that they provide corporations with.
"Silent waters run deep."
Thank you for telling me they changed their logo
Because a company runs an Oracle database does not mean that Oracle has access to the data. I fail to see how Oracle should get access to the detail of information you suggest, on 5 billion people.
Is Oracle more influential even more so than Microsoft? That's a scary thought.
They are all working in sync. Just 2 nights before, I was downloading a movie from YTS and to my surprise last night when I opened my prime video account on TV, exactly those 2 movies popped up in front of me.
I did a half year placement in the council I worked at as a HR assistant and I know loads of the information I would action in on the council servers are actually as well, using Oracle so essentially all 2000+ employees there as well as any others too such as emergency contacts and whatnot, Oracle definitely has the data of too
4:54 Aint No WAY OhiO strikes again
I knew Oracle from java but didn't know they were THIS huge.
who else knows about oracle but has never thought too much about them?
I didn't. The I started working for them. :(
But how do they have access to all that data?
Can Oracle see the content of their customers' databases?
Isn't the database of each company running locally on their own servers?
I waited through the whole video for an explanation of how Oracle was getting this data, and it was never explained. If any of the data that I work with ever leaked to the software vendor there would be hell to pay.
about time someone talks about oracle
I know Oracle as they're a database company and they acquired Java at the time we're studying about it.
Despite all that, they can't even make a usable version of Solaris.
Hey dude, love your channel and have been a fan for a long time. I was wondering if u could do a video about yourself at some point. U do lots of histories of companies and explaining events but I’m curious about how you got your start and why your interested in what you are. I think it would be a cool idea to let us know some more about ya
Really appreciate the support Alfie! Though a bit outdated, I do have a video like that from late 2021. It's called something like Who Is Logically Answered.
@@LogicallyAnswered o great I’ll check it out!
@@LogicallyAnswered just watched it! Great to know more about u Hari, has your plans changed much since then? And u know ur right I think I’m going to start a yt channel this month, I’ve been wanting to for years
Finally people are talking about oracle
Well, they lived up their name, the Oracle, the all-knowing.
Fun fact, the CIA was Oracle's first client and Larry Ellison worked on a project for the CIA
Until i saw this video I just dont know about Oracle and the fact that it controls data of 5 Billion people.....Very informative video....Thank you
oracle even owns virtualbox
Just stopping by to say that Oracle is a disgusting company and while it'd take a lot of nice technologies with it - all of which they bought so there's that- if be happy to see them go bancrupt tomorrow.
Oracle SQL - which is separate from MySQL which they acquired - is one of the worst SQL implementations around. Under their thumb many Sun projects withered including Java which just stopped really evolving for a good decade after they bought Sun, and they litigated like crazy against not only Google with Android in the process causing them to adopt Kotlin - a case btw which, if they had really won it, would've gone ahead and destroyed the entire current software development approach and basically forced every software piece to be incompatible with each other for fear of litigation - but are also threatening non profit work like OpenZFS.
rust seems to be what java was trying to be before oracle bought them
i hope nobody gets their hands on rust!
“Under observation, we act less free, which means we effectively are less free.”
Edward Snowden
I like how when you say that which company do you think violates your privacy the most and than I think of facebook being the one who does that and great video man :]
1:43 says Java but shows JavaScript stock footage
Yes, Java and JavaScript are different.
How important of a thing it is 🤓
oracle should never have been allowed to acquire all of those companies
I never knew this and knew of the company this is nuts because I thought Google and such as Apple were huge bur seeing how much data this company has compared to other companies is making me wonder how do they have that much compared to them
For real hahaha
it's just that they gather data from companies that gather data from people
Lmao yea
@@monke7566 yea I know I was being a bit bitter
Bro I guessed "Oracle?" from the beginning xD
Where's the video about SAP? Title?
Finaly the Oracle vidéo! Idk how I missed it
I got here from another video from the author, and 1st thing that caught my eye is the use of term "Violate your privacy", which would imply they are doing it without your knowledge BUT you have accepted them doing that, so it is would not violation but encroachment the bit lesser one of the two.
1:44 Says java and shows javascript (react)
Not mentioned is how Oracle is collecting the data of its customers' customers.
1:43 showing JavaScript when talking about Java nice
“Owns the programming language java”… shows javascript clip
This is a digital age. Companies don’t even care about our Privacy. Even What’sApp that was built on Privacy, still has some of our personal data. So yeah, it’s not new.
WhatsApp is owned by Meta/Facebook so how that is suprising?
Well have you learn through out history we collect data way way way back in the old day i mean realy old day it isn't new plus you give up your data when you use the internet have people ever think about that?
Don’t trust anyone these days. Trust No One.
the fact you need an oracle account to *download jdk* is already scuffed...
My apologies i have been watching your videos for months now, and i just noticed i havent even subscribed, thanks for sharing your knowledge.
Thank you for your support Ed!
typical ed
1:43 that is javascript
Well, I think Minecraft got more than 1B users tracked due to its java account requirement.
you got that a bit wrong, minecraft java required microsoft accounts.
1:49 I thought Omegle was gonna buy TikTok.
The governmental holy trinity; Oracle, SAP and Palantir
Actually i'm now scared about my data. The only solution here is just disable the internet 💀
1. Burn all of your devices.
2. Go to live in a forest
@@coffeemakerbottomcracked remember we have already collect data since the beginning of our existence on earth even without technologies like internet
Plus when you interact with people they also collect your data when sell thing the buyer will collect data so next time you can buy her/she products without need of remembering her name and tell your name again to the seller
Love ya man. Ur content is amazing.
Thank you Nuho!
Great video, keep up the good work...
Thank you Nicholas, will do!
these 2 billion are probable people who have no access to computers.
Click bait title I don't see any coherent argument here
Why did the data go to the therapist? Because it needed some privacy issues worked out!
amazing Oracle case study.
All those who are watching in 2023: Correction, 3 billion to go!
Oracle Is Turning Around And Recovering From Past Red Ink.
Self hosting is the last resort
It is easy to protect your privacy....
People don't care because it has a learning curve.
12:25 it's over nine Thousand!!!
I’m not on social media anymore. However I’m on TH-cam & google is in everything. I have an iPhone still & WiFi in my house. Like it’s really no escaping unless u off the grid grid & zero electricity.
i knew oracle only for Java but i didn't knew they had so much data
Oracle owns the programming language java
shows react code
I was aware of Oracle RDBMS and sun IP but nowhere near everything
4:54 "Dayton, Ohio"
_goes to check comments_
Hey brother great video as always!!!
Thank you as always Daniel!
I was eagerly waiting for this
0:04 Oracle?
Are you the same voice of gsmarena?
Soo, this would imply that oracles software for on premise software or private cloud installations would always phone hone to Oracle and leak out all of its corporate customer data. Sure, I can see it technically happening if one uses their SaaS solutions and their cloud. If those allegations would turn out to be true. Then the whole Cambridge Analytica scandal would be just a "fart in the wind"...