“Genera” is a plural form of “genus” (i.e. also “type,” but in the fancy scientific sense used in taxonomy).
“Genera” is a plural form of “genus” (i.e. also “type,” but in the fancy scientific sense used in taxonomy).
Not only did I haul drywall home in a minivan, I even had the foresight to buy a couple of 2x4s to act as rails to slide it on so the edges wouldn’t get chewed up by the rounded rear hatch opening.
I mean, If we’re talking about imposing vigilante justice on criminal corporate execs, I guess I’m down with that too.
No it is not the correct answer! The correct answer is to put the CEOs who perpetrate this criminal shit in prison for millions of counts of hacking and stalking!
Merely shrugging and implementing a technological workaround is not an appropriate response to someone perpetrating a felony against you!
These are criminal violations of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. Jail the motherfucking felon CEOs!
None of that is a substitute for government regulation. They must be forced to comply.
Another thing, just like the LG TV screensaver ads from the other thread, that would be a felony if a natural person did it.
Why are we tolerating this criminal behavior by corporations?
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On one hand, that’s true. On the other hand, a person should only need exactly one passphrase, which is the one used to unlock their password manager. Every other password should be randomly-generated and would only contain space characters by chance.
NIST generally knows what they’re doing
For now, at least. Could change after Inauguration Day.
Tsk, tsk. Somebody didn’t pay attention in their Greek mythology class! \s
Or, make a full collecting and recycling tax to be paid by those uncaring clients.
No, that’s not good enough. “Right to repair” is kind of an unfortunate name, because it really shouldn’t be just about repair. My property rights include a right to modify, too, and letting manufacturers off the hook by doing first-party replacements instead of facilitating work by third-parties is not sufficient to protect that right!
Frankly, if you’ve got untrustworthy software with that level of access and a threat model dangerous enough to throw out the hard drive, you’d probably better throw out the whole computer instead. In addition to the hard drive controller, malicious code could persist in the UEFI firmware, the graphics card firmware, or even in the Intel IME/AMD PSP subsystems.
Where are the 2020 bars?
(Yeah I know it was Covid and thus not comparable; I want to see anyway. Put an asterisk next to it if it makes you feel better.)
That’s not the backup plan; that’s the primary plan.
Was my sarcasm not thick enough?
My point was that PeerTube works just fine because BitTorrent is viable.
The only thing i felt lacking was the quest log.
What do you mean? Press the J key.
Yes, that’s also why bittorrent (which PeerTube runs on, by the way) is a figment of our collective imaginations, impossible to viably implement.
The annoying thing is that they held us hostage for our free labor, but the results are proprietary for Google’s benefit only.
That training data ought to be forced to be made freely available to the public, since we’re the ones who actually created it.