I'd add onto this, since a criminal law would never be enforced, that the recipient of a bogus takedown has the right to sue the takedown issuer for compensation, including legal fees.
Eh I've seen apps refuse to run on Android if it's rooted, which is a problem for custom firmwares that can't ever not be rooted.
Heck, even certain vendors' software (at least Samsung and T-Mobile did this) will do anything between refuse to run and intentionally brick the device if it even detects rooting.
Yeah, but now that we live in the error of grammar nazis calling out every minor "error", English is not going to evolve even in the minor ways it still could.
Ah I see, I think saying "and/or" would have been more appropriate.
I don't really know anything about late 19th-century European social norms so I don't know what flavors of Christianity were considered "acceptable" at the time.
Which is why I think that presidential campaigns should be officially declared as advertising and that not following through on campaign promises should be a civil offense (that way the citizens can press charges. like the executive branch would take action against themselves!).
Drive-by malware is already the norm, you just don't know it because you have secured your browser (through adblocking/disabled plugins/noscript/etc.).
Remember that the 80486 was back in the Golden Age of computing when Compaq could legally reverse-engineer an IBM PC and not get sued out of existence.
Yep. It's nice how they didn't just go to the boys will be boys shit. These kids need to learn about the consequences of their actions sooner rather than later. If they were adults throwing water balloons at others they would have been arrested. Why let them get away with it just because they're two years younger?
Can't you get a patent on someone else's discovery if they didn't patent it first? Isn't that what happened with MP4?
I just always believed that that was the plan all along in over-parenting, to raise a child that'll never grow up.
Re: Re:
I'd add onto this, since a criminal law would never be enforced, that the recipient of a bogus takedown has the right to sue the takedown issuer for compensation, including legal fees.
Re: Re: i have an android
Eh I've seen apps refuse to run on Android if it's rooted, which is a problem for custom firmwares that can't ever not be rooted.
Heck, even certain vendors' software (at least Samsung and T-Mobile did this) will do anything between refuse to run and intentionally brick the device if it even detects rooting.
Re:
I think it's the Pacific Northwest region of the US, but I'm not sure.
Yeah, but now that we live in the error of grammar nazis calling out every minor "error", English is not going to evolve even in the minor ways it still could.
Wow, France's laws are strange
Encryption is illegal there but it's also the home of the massively patent infringing VLC?
Re: Re: Re: Re:
Ah I see, I think saying "and/or" would have been more appropriate.
I don't really know anything about late 19th-century European social norms so I don't know what flavors of Christianity were considered "acceptable" at the time.
Which is why I think that presidential campaigns should be officially declared as advertising and that not following through on campaign promises should be a civil offense (that way the citizens can press charges. like the executive branch would take action against themselves!).
Re: Re:
So you're a old money, heterosexual, Protestant (or Catholic if you're European), white, European-descended, man right?
But Ken Jennings would have won if he bet everything he had on the last Final Jeopardy.
What's that they say? "If you're not doing anything wrong you have nothing to hide?"
I don't think it'll matter
If she's already had to run for re-election twice and won both times despite her opponents bringing this up, would a third attempt really work?
Re: Re:
The biggest coffee at Starbucks only costs $2.45...
Re: Shall we play a game?
Drive-by malware is already the norm, you just don't know it because you have secured your browser (through adblocking/disabled plugins/noscript/etc.).
A cell phone can be a dangerous weapon
As the saying goes, the pen is mightier than the sword, and the camera is mightier than the gun.
Re: Pentium
Remember that the 80486 was back in the Golden Age of computing when Compaq could legally reverse-engineer an IBM PC and not get sued out of existence.
Re: Re: I'm glad they actually arrested these guys
Obviously you miss when you could strangle a guy in front of 30 witnesses and not even get told you did a bad thing.
I'm glad they actually arrested these guys
Yep. It's nice how they didn't just go to the boys will be boys shit. These kids need to learn about the consequences of their actions sooner rather than later. If they were adults throwing water balloons at others they would have been arrested. Why let them get away with it just because they're two years younger?
> It begins with Troy Maye, who is accused of grabbing identifying info on people and then attempting to sell the identities off to bidders.
Isn't that just called analytics nowadays?