Just checked, it's there on Firefox on Windows, too. Also, Windows itself has a "Send To..." item on the right click menu for images, and one of the options in the submenu below that is "Mail Recipient". (Chrome has the possibly-even-more-useless "Generate QR code for this image" but I don't see an "e-mail this image" option in Chrome on Windows.)
AndyTheAbsurd
joined 1 week ago
In a corporate environment where you care about such things, you really want to disable the functionality of the user setting the background in the operating system, not in a specific application. Otherwise, you're going to have to track down every application that includes this functionality, figure out how to disable it it in that application, and find a way to apply that change to every PC. (Microsoft's Photos app, for example, can set pictures as either background or lock screen.)
Yup. If they're not doing business with the federal government, they need to point out that it's a free country and they can do whatever the hell they think is good for business. And follow up by pointing out that Target's current condition shows that eliminating DEI is clearly bad for business if it's something that the customer base expects.