Escalating from a knife fight to a gun fight, especially with bystanders around, doesn’t make it better.
Escalating from a knife fight to a gun fight, especially with bystanders around, doesn’t make it better.
It was a joke to make the point that vim can be the easiest tool to use if you are trying to do a complex task.
Easy is relative. What are you trying to do? Replace a value in an yaml file? Then nano is easier. Trying to refactor a business critical perl/brainfuck polyglot script in production? Then you probably want to use vim (or emacs if you are one of those people)
And? All of those being part of the same walled garden is a bug in the legal system not a feature.
Not a native speaker, but if I wanted to boil it down to a word I would use “made a trailer”. I think you are right about the algoritm confusing a movie trailer with a physical trailer.
If it reaches the threshold the European Comission is forced to formally answer to it, which requires them do a full review of the subject and this greatly increases the probability of something being done.
For desktop you probably can use something like https://github.com/TCB13/LoFloccus/ to save the bookmarks to a file in Synchthing. (Disclaimer: I haven’t tried this myself)
That is a lower circle of hell.
One thing is allowing the other is actively collecting and processing the data.
Also no. But 2 wrongs don’t make a right.
You are speaking like there are only two alternatives and none of them involves following the law.
Firefox creates a report based on what the website asks, but does not give the result to the website. Instead, Firefox encrypts the report and anonymously submits it using the Distributed Aggregation Protocol (DAP) to an “aggregation service”.
Mozilla can’t send user data to an “aggregation service” without explicit consent, no matter how much propaganda they use to explain it.
Why is Mozilla coming from the position that what advertisers want is reasonable or acceptable in any shape or form? The advertisement industry existed for centuries without the ability to spy on people and they were doing just fine.
Edit: this being opt-out instead of opt-in also violates the GDPR.
Before that don’t forget to voluntary submit a summary report of your activity to the NSA.
Ah yes, the reasonable solution to deal with someone cosplaying as a private Stasi is to voluntarily submit a report of your activities /s
The middle ground is not always a reasonable position.
No, GPL in particular demands the copyright notices are preserved.
The user will forget about the old UI after 2 weeks.
Are you really comparing the use of freedom of association with state censorship backed by literal violence?
Do you understand what “comparing” means?
And a shortcut to open Microsoft® LinkedIn® at OS level, and what surprises me the most is that uses your default browser instead of always opening it in Edge.
That’s not how batteries work (at least not with the results seen in this case).