And if your client (or client's insurance) is just half-way competent, they will notice that some stuff have no activated license.
You will end up in a world of pain.
Just don't do that.
And if your client (or client's insurance) is just half-way competent, they will notice that some stuff have no activated license.
You will end up in a world of pain.
Just don't do that.
Best distro: the one you are currently using on a daily basis.
Worst distro: windows
In France there are some mistakes that became social markers.
People following conspiracy theories are mostly bad educated people, and they wrongly conjugate some verbs.
The most common examples are:
Making one of those mistakes will immediately tag you as a fool.
Even though, only the winning side would draft the "official" version of the events. The "real" "truth" would appear only decades later, when everyone involved is dead (or almost) and independant research can happen. E.g. a former French "résistant" recently confessed his group summarily executed a bunch of captured German Soldier in 1944. Some of the members went in politics afterwards, preventing any investigation to take place.
Humanity will make huge progress once it stop commenting every sh*t originating from E. Misk.
Seriously, there is now way to block all that noise?
Cost-cutting is corporate-greed mindset, therefore you have to solve it with the same mindset.
Fire people ! Even you if needed. And let the end-users deal with the outcome.
(This is not a serious post ^^ )
Hi, Never tried to delete my account there, but if you have a track of your discussion with them, I'm sure your DPA will be happy to hear your complain :)
Sweden is following the path that France led.
Hope this country can find a solution other than burying the head in the sand (spoiler: France already demonstrated that it doesn't work)
Not dealing with **the effects of **copyright is the thing here.
And in that sense he can gain some insights ;)
If I had to implement this business model, I would go to a country that don't give a f* about dcma & stuff, and implement it in a similar way as Mega did.
With just the adjunction that if you upload a new book, you get free subscription for one week/month/year (depending if you share a small article, or the whole Encyclopedia Universalis)
He has actually a point. You need access to your services for which purposes? As long as you are @home, you have access to your services (but those cannot reach outside). You can still browse your photos and likes.
If you are out, it's easier to get a copy of what you need on your device (e.g. passwords) than set up a backup internet connection. (IMO, at least)
Sure, as you know that you can throw people overboard to save your own ass.