Thank you. That is a good explanation.
Thank you. That is a good explanation.
Okay, I understand so far.
What I am struggling with is the limitations of duristriction.
So the EU finds the Australian company in breach of their rules. They send a notice of intent to pursue damages to the Australian company. And they tell the EU to kick rocks.
Surely laws made up in one country don’t apply in all. The internet makes this a muddy area, as it’s fully connected and nothing is stopping Joe in Netherlands from signing up to a service hosted in Vietnam. The Vietnam company can just ignore GDPR, ignore requests, ignore fines.
So say a local Australian software company tells you to get fkd. What can the EU regulator do?
Can’t a non EU holder of your data tell you to kick rocks?
I’m pleasantly surprised the number of replies on Lemmy saying they used this service. It’s nice to know that there are some old people on here, like me :)
Highly likely English isn’t their first language
The governance has a secret system.
It is likely he was at fault.
Sen. John Fetterman was briefly hospitalized after rear-ending another driver on a Maryland highway
Says it’s true
Yeah this. Fed up with sensationalist headlines that are far from reality. Us Lemmy users have a better understanding of what’s going on but we shouldn’t be falling for this journalism as it’s nonsense.
I’ve used Linux for decades but not for desktop usage. I work with Linux every day.
I recently purchased a high end workstation to act as a hypervisor for multiple desktop systems. The plan was to boot into a Linux system and then from there load up one of many desktop OS and work seamlessly within a VM. This has worked well on a Windows host with VMWare Workstation and allows me as a contractor to have separation of configuration between customers.
However I found Linux desktop to have too many glitches. From failed package installs, multiple monitor problems and some special keys being sent to both VM and host. I also found the user interface of some apps to be bad, which I can look past but with the other fundamental issues it added a bad taste to the experience. I really want it to work and I do go back every now and then to try again.
And in both cases, that is bullshit. Just because it happens doesn’t mean we should accept it.
New cars now read speed signs as you pass them. It’s a bit of a gimmick and sometimes misses them.
I didn’t realise so many non-Nintendo studios made games for Nintendo. I’m not a console gamer so I wouldn’t know. You should have posted this the first time, but I guess now you understood their point. You’re welcome :)
The was a long sentence. I imagined you gasping for breath at the end.
I think the point is they go for new games instead of remakes. Not that they don’t use the same IP.
I don’t know if you are for this change or against
No idea why I’m replying, maybe I’m just bored.
You said US workers have better working protections, someone disagreed with that, which you replied with a twisted interpretation that they said China is fantastic, which was replied with “wtf” and now this. It’s like some drug invested conversation where both sides make their own interpretation of what is said and continue to escalate.
I have no arguments on the topic itself, I’m just sick of the constant confrontational discussion with little or no meaning.
This is what I use today. However spammers can easily remove the plus address to send email normally so isn’t quite so effective.
What frustrates me is so many websites strip the ‘+’ from the address, either as inline JavaScript or even worse, after submission.
“Clamshell mode”. That’s cool. I’m stealing that.