Every ISP and device has built in parental features.
twinnie
The couple claimed that their house got repossessed by the bank and that's what inspired them to do this big walk that the book's about. Turns out that when the author was unemployed a friend helped her out by getting her a job at the company run by her husband. The author then went on to steal loads of money over the next few years and nearly drive the company bankrupt; causing loads of grief for the company's owners and causing lots of mental problems like depression, etc. The author eventually got busted and had to agree to a payment plan which they didn't keep up with, and that was the point their house got repossessed.
My mate had a crappy old van for his run around because it was the cheapest thing he could get his hands on, we called it the Red Enigma. My brother has a crappy old silver hatchback that was actually pretty fast and we called it the Silver Bullet.
So I guess, colour and whatever sounds right.
I do love a roof terrace but given this photo got posted on Lemmy I suspect it may be overlooked by a very affordable Airbnb.
It's not about censorship. If I can still access everything then it's not being censored, it's about being able to use the internet without having to hand over personal information. If I walk into a shop to buy a porn mag the shopkeeper doesn't take a photo of me and my ID and promise to get rid of it later.
I liked this game but the combat really killed it for me. The enemies just move too quickly and in a game about conserving ammo it was way too hard to reliably hit them.
Sounds like it wasn’t gonna happen until the newspaper got involved though.
This sounds amazing.
Ofcom say they did a survey and found that 71% of parents want this, but that was in 2016 and I doubt the parents were aware of how intrusive the solution was, how easily defeated it would be, and that the tools to prevent the problem was already there (parental controls).
Went from 73% to 49%.