It's strange that we've put so much work into DRM and yet piracy persists. Surely by now the technology would've eliminated pirates. Almost as if...
The way I see it, that number is a baseline figure for what their services would be offered for in exchange. If someone came up to me and said "here, I'll give you $53 and in exchange you'll let me surveil you for a year" I'd say no, but maybe someone else would've said yes. Then, as an experiment, maybe we can let the market take it from there, now that there's a price and some form of discovery mechanism.
I love lights and lighting in general.
Does Murena 2 still use microG?
It's true. Pragmatically speaking if you don't have access to the server software you can't play it if the servers go down, and besides reverse engineering or the goodwill of the developers I'm not aware of any games with online components that continue to be playable after their servers are taken down.
It is the most commonly used browser and hence the one where such changes have the greatest effect.
What is your job?
I wonder if this'll also affect Tinnitus?
conflate a company from a country with the government of that country
It's actually okay to do this for China, because just about every private enterprise has a CCP cell now. It's important to understand how state capitalism works with the CCP and China.
Or perhaps they do know what it is.
Why not just 'viewers'?
"Moral responsibility" isn't going to affect the various amoral, systemic causes of the climate crisis.