There do appear to be some hiccups on steam's end. Young Horses (developers of Octodad: Dadliest Catch) reported that something like 80% of the returns they've experienced were outside steam's two-week return window. Specifically purchases from 2-5 months ago. The opinion from the dev seems to be that this is something that will be fixed soon and isn't worth stressing over.
I dunno. Personally, I think there's a reasonable possibility of confusion between breweries and wineries. I'm not sure that the average person draws that much distinction between the two. That said, I think the case for confusion would be a lot stronger if they were sharing company names, rather than just product line names.
So, as much as it makes me nauseous to defend this sort of thing, the Kickstarter was fairly clear that the distribution channel would be Flixter. It was posted in the FAQ portion of the movie's kickstarter page. It was also clear that it would only be available in a list of countries, not globally. As much as I think the idea of confining distribution to Flixter is absolute shit (and it is, make no mistake about it), the campaign was upfront about it. It was not a bait and switch.
So, I have Comcast's Performance internet plan, which (I am told) accords me 25mbps. I have, at no point, ever breached 3mbps. Why in the name of all that is good, would I want to pay them more money so that they can fail to deliver a greater percentage of what I pay for? If they actually delivered 25mbps, I would probably take one of the many, many calls they irritatingly make to me asking me to upgrade to their 50mbps plan.
Given the other items on the list, it seems to be listing people who can conduct recording, suggesting it means that law enforcement can still record criminal behavior, not that you can record law enforcement.
On the post: Bob Costas Rails Against The Internet After Criticism For Going Nuclear On MLB Pitcher
On the post: Game Developers Wary Of Steam Refund Policy Because Customers Are Using It
On the post: Trademark Dispute Between Brewery And Winery Over Northstar Brand
On the post: ACLU Files Lawsuit Against Mayor And Police Officers Who Shut Down Parody Twitter Account, Arrested Its Owner
On the post: Comcast Apparently Hopes No One Actually Looks At Its Ridiculously Misleading Claims Of Broadband Competition
On the post: Warner Bros. Turns A Kickstarter Success Story Into A Flaming Mess With Proprietary Platforms And DRM
On the post: Keurig Insists Coffee DRM Brings 'Interactive-Enabled Benefits' And Is For Your Own Safety
So, are they admitting that current Keurig coffee machines are both improperly performing and dangerous? I mean, they lack this feature, right?
On the post: Gun Manufacturer Files Highly Speculative Lawsuit Against Forum Owners For Allegedly Libelous Statements
On the post: Please Stop Trying To Argue That Netflix Should Be More Like Traditional Cable TV
On the post: Highway Trooper Suing Miami Police Dept. For Repeatedly Accessing Her Personal Data After She Pulled Over One Of Its Officers For Speeding
Can we cite this against the insane copyright statutory fines? "See, even cops think this is bullshit."
On the post: Comcast-Backed Lobbyist Insists Seattle Doesn't Want Faster, Cheaper Broadband
On the post: New York Times Suffers Redaction Failure, Exposes Name Of NSA Agent And Targeted Network In Uploaded PDF
On the post: Yet Another Prenda Gambit Fails: Judge Agrees To Sanctions Against Paul Duffy Over Bogus Defamation Lawsuit
On the post: South Carolina Senator Aims To Criminalize The Recording Of Criminal Activity
Re: Re:
On the post: South Carolina Senator Aims To Criminalize The Recording Of Criminal Activity
On the post: EA 'Embraces' SimCity Players: Releases Useless Modding Tools And Promises Supposedly Impossible 'Offline' Mode
On the post: NSA Officials Hate Ed Snowden With A Passion
On the post: Latest Twist On DRM Of Physical Products: Machines Locked Down By Geolocation
On the post: Rep. Peter King Says NSA Should Spy On Congress, Because They Might Be Talking To Al Qaeda
I actually agree with this. The problem, however, is that the NSA has been boning everyone.
On the post: Judge Says That Sherlock Holmes Is In The Public Domain
Re: Perpetual copyright duration
Next >>