There’s usually more peasants than guards.
I mean, the US is a third world country ruled by someone who is dumb about technology.
He only follows the old testament.
An ISP is absolutely going to be able to differentiate location based on public IP. They assign blocks of IPs to geographic locations for use with DHCP in that region. You can go to whatsmyip.com and see your geographic location yourself.
There are practical examples of this that you likely experience every day. Steam has geographic restrictions and pricing based on location, streaming services geolock their offerings, etc.
It’s not costly to implement a blacklist.
The voter suppression wasn’t as rampant in 2016 as it was this year.
The people trying to leave are the people who voted for the other party.
You ate the onion
Lame, come back when it’s running doom
I’ll have to see if they have distributors in my area. Thank you!
Right? I’m sober, but I honestly miss beer because I enjoy the taste, not for the alcohol content.
Or just email the account used for registering the part when there’s an update
You probably don’t have a TPM which is a requirement for 11.
I don’t think Harris can win the election.
But… That’s how encryption keys are stored.
The difficulty is that our governments and voters are so polarized that an amendment banning the government from drowning puppies wouldn’t have a chance in hell of getting passed.
Half of the country wants the supreme court ruling to stay.
The supreme court has nothing to do with constitutional amendments. To propose one you need a 2/3 majority vote in both the house and senate (or 2/3 of states calling a constitutional convention, but no amendment has gone through this process). Then, it requires that 75% of the states ratify it.
There’s no chance the amendment will even get 2/3 of the congressional vote, much less 75% of states agreeing to it.
Maybe I’m thinking of another thing, but wasnt that scanning locally for hashes vs uploading anything?