https://www.stopkillinggames.com/
There are direct government petitions for the United Kingdom, Canada, and Australia.
https://www.stopkillinggames.com/
There are direct government petitions for the United Kingdom, Canada, and Australia.
More "predictions" from retired lawyers. May as well just be a blog post.
Wake me up when there's actual news, not just commentary fluff.
Polish authorities are believed to have stopped using Pegasus in 2021, around the time the Guardian and others publicised details of the spyware, including revelations that the numbers targeted by clients were also logged by NSO Group, creating a potential security breach.
My concern is what spyware governments have been using since 2021, and how good they've gotten at covering it up in the last 3 years.
Means it's probably infected with who knows what kind of zero days.
I thought the GOP were against Sharia law?
I made a simple comment showing my support to the admin, which after this experience I'm sure is much needed. You've come in here behaving like an ass with zero effort yourself - you were wrong, my comments have had far more value to the discussion than anything you've brought. I don't think the problem is the platform, I think the problem is you.
That depends on whether the connection is sold to cover one device or several.
No I get the feeling that Geralt won't be, it's described as a new trilogy. However that doesn't really fill me with hope based on the general shifting of attitudes from management at CDPR. Also, with previous Witcher games they had a story to develop from, I'm not confident they can build as good of a story from scratch by themselves.
I really do need to replay Cyberpunk, and maybe even buy the expansion. I was certainly disappointed that my preorder didn't come with the expansion, like all the Witcher games did, else I probably would have replayed already. However ultimately my problems with the game were less about the bugs and such and more about the lack of content fleshing out the world, and the lack of consequences for actions - I don't think that's changed very much through all the patches.
Witcher 3 was great because it felt like a full world, Cyberpunk is closer to Just Cause, a city where you complete somewhat repetitive missions. Cyberpunk is much better than Just Cause, but it didn't come close to living up to Witcher 3.
They can care about what device they're providing internet to. Net neutrality is about where content is coming from.
Net neutrality is about service to last mile customers, but it is based upon interconnection agreements across the L1 and L2 level.
ISP's pay for a connection to L1 and L2, so their users (who pay ISP's) can access content on those networks. Websites pay for a connection to L1 and L2 so their content can be available on those networks.
ISP's want to also charge websites for access into their networks of users, in spite of the fact their users already pay them for access to the website content. If some websites don't pay, then ISP's will provide a lower service to their users for those websites. Net neutrality says ISP's should not do this.
Differentiating between locally used data and hotspot data has nothing to do with this. Hotspot data is about the device the data is going to, not where the data is coming from, and typically (or at least traditionally, maybe not so anymore) a PC will use more data than a phone. A PC is more likely to have large multi-gigabyte downloads (eg games), although these days video streaming is perhaps the main bandwidth hog and is generally equal across all devices.
A home internet connection is expected to serve all devices in that home, while a mobile internet connection is expected to serve only that mobile device (excluding mobile broadband options, which serve multiple devices but are typically more expensive). The ISP's network is designed with this in mind.
It is more reasonable for an ISP to only provide data to the phone you're paying for than it is for them to throttle websites you already paid for. However, really both are kind of bullshit - usage limits in general are completely disproportionate to actual costs.
Once Trump signed the surrender, and released Taliban fighters
Can you please point me to more info on these two points?
6 months this Sunday.