The point of buying a fridge like this is specifically to use the internet to pull up recipes, shopping lists, etc. If somebody connects it to the internet, that doesn't magically make it their fault this happened to them, they're using it as intended. Samsung just decided to fuck with them because it's a big corporation and it can.
"Like this week, when Trump issued an executive order revoking Biden’s EO attempting to restore some semblance of competitive balance to the U.S. economy. That order spawned some useful and popular things, like Lina Khan’s crackdowns on right to repair abuses, the investigations into big tech monopolization of ad markets, the ban on noncompetes, efforts to make cancelling services easier, attempts to avoid coordinated corporate suppression of wages, and more.
These initiatives had their warts but it was the closest the U.S. — with a Congress literally too corrupt to pass meaningful reform — had gotten to actual antitrust, labor, and competition reform in a generation."
Reading comprehension is a wonderful thing.
The problem is that the law doesn't define "public" or "semi-public". They could mean "public" as in "you don't have to login to see posts", or they could mean "public" as in "available to be used by the general public", there's no way to know and bad-faith fuckwits will bring suits based on whichever interpretation suits them best.
I feel compelled to point out that this is far from the first concentration camp in American history. Joe Arpaio's tent cities, the immigration detention centers on the border, and the detention of Japanese-Americans during WWII all come to mind. America has a long tradition of locking people up in subhuman conditions for the crime of being not-white.
"Say, Drake, I hear you like 'em young
You better not ever go to cell block one
To any bitch that talk to him and they in love
Just make sure you hide your lil' sister from him"
-lyrics from "Not Like Us"
Several other people are named directly as well. What was that about it not being a diss track?
That is exactly the claim being made. That the Fifth Circuit's decision set a precedent (it didn't) that the officer's actions weren't excessive force, and that he acted in the situation with knowledge of the precedent (which he couldn't have because the decision was issued two years after the events at issue).
Offering a service for free but charging for the hardware required to enable that service is a de facto charge for the service. Entire internet scams used to be built on this exact move.
FEMA "interfered" because unauthorized civilian pilots were flooding the airspace in defiance of FAA regulations and creating an extremely hazardous environment that could've caused even more death and destruction. They were protecting people, as they're supposed to do.
Jack Dorsey isn't involved with Bluesky anymore. In fact, he disagreed with how it was being run so much that he deleted his account and went to Nostr instead.
In a lot of places, including where I live, Amazon uses either UPS or the USPS for last-mile delivery. They only have their own delivery systems in reasonably large cities. So there's a good chance a UPS strike WILL impact a lot of people's Amazon deliveries.
Techdirt has not posted any stories submitted by Sayyadina.
I mean, both, tbh. But mostly I meant AI.
???
The fuck is this slop? We're defending the plagiarism machine now?
The point of buying a fridge like this is specifically to use the internet to pull up recipes, shopping lists, etc. If somebody connects it to the internet, that doesn't magically make it their fault this happened to them, they're using it as intended. Samsung just decided to fuck with them because it's a big corporation and it can.
"Like this week, when Trump issued an executive order revoking Biden’s EO attempting to restore some semblance of competitive balance to the U.S. economy. That order spawned some useful and popular things, like Lina Khan’s crackdowns on right to repair abuses, the investigations into big tech monopolization of ad markets, the ban on noncompetes, efforts to make cancelling services easier, attempts to avoid coordinated corporate suppression of wages, and more. These initiatives had their warts but it was the closest the U.S. — with a Congress literally too corrupt to pass meaningful reform — had gotten to actual antitrust, labor, and competition reform in a generation." Reading comprehension is a wonderful thing.
The problem is that the law doesn't define "public" or "semi-public". They could mean "public" as in "you don't have to login to see posts", or they could mean "public" as in "available to be used by the general public", there's no way to know and bad-faith fuckwits will bring suits based on whichever interpretation suits them best.
I feel compelled to point out that this is far from the first concentration camp in American history. Joe Arpaio's tent cities, the immigration detention centers on the border, and the detention of Japanese-Americans during WWII all come to mind. America has a long tradition of locking people up in subhuman conditions for the crime of being not-white.
Welp, completely missed that. My bad!
"Say, Drake, I hear you like 'em young You better not ever go to cell block one To any bitch that talk to him and they in love Just make sure you hide your lil' sister from him" -lyrics from "Not Like Us" Several other people are named directly as well. What was that about it not being a diss track?
That is exactly the claim being made. That the Fifth Circuit's decision set a precedent (it didn't) that the officer's actions weren't excessive force, and that he acted in the situation with knowledge of the precedent (which he couldn't have because the decision was issued two years after the events at issue).
Yeah, and I never got my check from those cheapskates!
- Offering a service for free but charging for the hardware required to enable that service is a de facto charge for the service. Entire internet scams used to be built on this exact move.
- FEMA "interfered" because unauthorized civilian pilots were flooding the airspace in defiance of FAA regulations and creating an extremely hazardous environment that could've caused even more death and destruction. They were protecting people, as they're supposed to do.
What a shit apologist you are.Goddamn, what is wrong with the comments section today...?
Re: same Sociopath
Jack Dorsey isn't involved with Bluesky anymore. In fact, he disagreed with how it was being run so much that he deleted his account and went to Nostr instead.
Re:
In a lot of places, including where I live, Amazon uses either UPS or the USPS for last-mile delivery. They only have their own delivery systems in reasonably large cities. So there's a good chance a UPS strike WILL impact a lot of people's Amazon deliveries.