Re: As usual, this blog kind of sucks on the tech side of things.
Be fair. "Glitch" was the word you used, which means unintended and temporary... which would indicate your suggestion of "mis-function." that's why it's a glitch. You're making an incorrect assumption.
They word they used was "erroneously" which means WRONG. Wrong can be introduced many ways.. some of them are just like you say... intentional or laziness.. they admit it's wrong, without blaming any cause, and they are going to fix it.
All that aside, I'm already tired of the stupid "game" and I've not even installed it, let alone played it.
My old apartment complex went as far to include in my lease that I could only subscribe to ONE internet provider. Served by no less than 3, I was allowed access to only the worst of the 3. My street had 2 cable providers and DSL but I had to suffer through
It baffles the mind that this is a thing... because someone really believes that they'll stop the next 9/11 by finding an Instagram account named: ISIS LEADER - DEATH TO AMERICA"
Can we then assert that since computers are "hacked all the time" that a computer was already hacked at that time and being used covertly for such activities as this man was accused of? If it's a blanket sweep of every violation then it stands to reason that if JUST ONE person was already hacked and being used this way they AT LEAST ONE person would be pegged unjustly for a crime they didn't commit.
I would imagine the copyright is on the photo of the artwork not a new copyright on the artwork. Taking your own photo should result in yet another new copyright. That being said... if you're restricted from taking photographs, as many museums do, you have no way to display a photo of an artwork that isn't, in some way, a violation of the photographers copyright. Very poor ruling indeed.
How long before we see accusations that an innocent city boy was able to be recruited by ISIS on free city wi-fi and now it's all the cities fault? ...because personal accountability doesn't exist any more. Shame.
Hasn't the NFL been rather aggressive in Trademark disputes themselves? Aren't TV stations using "The Big Game" because of some stupid dispute over "The Super Bowl"?? and then the NFL went as far as to try and trademark "The Big Game" as well???
Maybe Dr. Pepper is stepping in out of fear that once the NFL owns a trademark they might pursue legal actions to stop others from using it. Dr. Pepper may just be issuing a pre-emptive strike.
How does restricting content create more choice? If there was a strong youtube competitor that wasn't zero rated while youtube was...how does this open it as a choice for me?
Let's kickstart an encryption that complies... the backdoor password for the gov will be "f*ck the gov" or "i am an asshat" and only usable on December 25th, 3199... ensuring that it will be totally useless by that time... but hey, it's a backdoor and it will provide legible data...
..this is the purest example of the give an inch take a mile theory the gov't follows daily. When someone says, "yeah, we should break all privacy laws because, you know, it's ONE terrorists cell phone.." they really get this behavior from the gov't.
Not true. Functionality has nothing to do with it. It's usability. The usability of this device ceases. Even bricked devices by the definition you infer have SOME functionality, even if it means it's just a screen that pops up the logo.
Amazon says it's published by "That Guy" and "Why should you buy this book?" in the description says "Well it is an instant collector’s item..." and apparently owning this book gives you cred for being a "true believer" in what is billed as FICTION.
The reality is that the mouse print catches our mouse balls in the mouse trap. There are no alternatives that the mouse print isn't ridiculously and overwhelmingly in favor of the provider on every aspect. Contracts, if we can call them that, offer ZERO consumer protection, are non-negotiable and bind us to things whether or not we agree. The only solution is to just not sign the contract and go without. Sure, there ARE alternatives but you are still agreeing to terms and they have you by the mouse balls too.
On the post: Pokemon Go Hysteria Again Highlights How Media Is Happy To Be Gullible And Wrong -- If It Means More Ad Eyeballs
Re: As usual, this blog kind of sucks on the tech side of things.
They word they used was "erroneously" which means WRONG. Wrong can be introduced many ways.. some of them are just like you say... intentional or laziness.. they admit it's wrong, without blaming any cause, and they are going to fix it.
All that aside, I'm already tired of the stupid "game" and I've not even installed it, let alone played it.
On the post: Appeals Court: A Bunch Of Mostly-Irrelevant Information Is Not 'Probable Cause'
When?
On the post: Kickbacks And Legal Tricks Are Protecting Mega-ISPs From Apartment Broadband Competition
True story...
On the post: DHS Wants Travelers Entering The US To Include Their Social Media Handles... Just Because
Another dumb rule...
On the post: Judge Says FBI Can Hack Computers Without A Warrant Because Computer Users Get Hacked All The Time
Hacked all the time...
On the post: Terrible Ruling In Germany: Digitizing The Public Domain Creates New Copyright
Re:
On the post: NY Post Craps On NYC's Plan To Offer Free Wi-Fi -- Because The Homeless Might Watch Porn
Oh noz!
On the post: Concussion Protocol: Can You Tell The Difference Between Soda And One Half Of A Football Team?
Aggressiveness...
Maybe Dr. Pepper is stepping in out of fear that once the NFL owns a trademark they might pursue legal actions to stop others from using it. Dr. Pepper may just be issuing a pre-emptive strike.
On the post: Forbes Is Confused: You Can View Content Using An Adblocker By Promising Not To Use An Adblocker
On the post: Law Enforcement Forced To Hand Over $41K It Seized From Businessman At Airport, Plus Another $10K In Legal Fees
This always bugs me.
On the post: US Attorney Suggests Solution To Open Source Encryption: Ban Importation Of Open Source Encryption
Hmm.
On the post: Wireless Industry Survey: Everybody Really Loves Zero Rating
zero
On the post: Why Doesn't The Anti-Encryption Bill List Any Penalties?
backdoor passwords...
On the post: Obama Administration's Expansion Of Domestic Spying Powers Dwarfs The 'Good Old Days' Of Bush And John Yoo
Exhibit A
On the post: Head Of British Rights Group: Piracy Is Google's Fault Even If It's Not Actually Google's Fault
Haha.
On the post: You Don't Actually Own What You Buy Volume 2,203: Google Bricking Revolv Smart Home Hardware
Re: Re: Re:
On the post: The Cable Industry Wants Netflix Investigated... For Throttling Itself
Re: Re: That isn't why this is happening
On the post: Author Sues Half The Internet For Defamation, Copyright Infringement, Cyberbullying, Use Of Section 230
That Guy...
What?
On the post: AT&T Uses Binding Arbitration Mouse Print To Kill Throttling Class Action
It's all or nothing.
On the post: Apple's VP Of Software Engineering: No, We Have Never Given A Backdoor To Any Government
This is nothing new...
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