I'm not a vegetarian, but I consume very low amount of mean compared to the average (I'd say I consume no more than I need), and I totally agree that there should be no difference between cows and horses, as both are very intelligent and can get attached to humans or other species. Same goes for many other mammals, and not limited to.
Nope, it's completely fine to eat cow or horse meat cooked like that (but not ovines, pigs or birds). It's very common in Italy. Never heard of food poisoning from this kind of meat. I do hear of food poisoning from chicken meat or seafood, though, as they are more prone to host dangerous parasites. I would still carefully select the meat vendor or restaurant, though.
OK, but what happens to Sammy the snail?
Nope, our robots write poems and make beautiful art, so we can concentrate doing actual work.
Why does it collect User/Device ID, messages, payment history and other data? Is there a detailed privacy policy anywhere?
And that's evolution, fellas! Will the Panther become a separate species? We'll find out in a million years.
Redeem all free games from Epic. Never install their launcher. You get a free library to use with Geforce Now.
I clicked the X on the cross-site cookies, and they do not appear anymore after restarting the browser. That's annoying though, ans I'm still wondering if those cookies are actually blocked because of total cookie protection.
EDIT: oh well, I think I found the reason: https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/third-party-trackers?as=u&utm_source=inproduct#w_managing-cross-site-cookies Imho this should be disabled in strict mode. EDIT2: nvm, I found a relevant issue in arkenfox's github and updated the post.
I pay for Amazon Prime, but still get less buffer time by streaming torrents with Stremio, which also never fails to remember where I left a movie at (even if I change the torrent source, which is crazy)
Why forcing the browsers? Couldn't they just make a law for ISPs to block specific domains?