That was something Disney Lawyers claimed, but was never actually agreed/enforced.
So it doesn't actually hold any weight until a court actually rules on it.
That was something Disney Lawyers claimed, but was never actually agreed/enforced.
So it doesn't actually hold any weight until a court actually rules on it.
I use the fusion VPN function of my Asus router so new devices and specific devices can only use the VPN. Other devices can access.internet without the VPN.
It's pretty stable. I think I've had the connection ( wireguard ) drop twice so that I had to reconnect it. Not sure if that is related to the VPN on Asus though.
The reason not all devices use the VPN is because there's a bunch of streaming sites ( local ) that claim you're not in the country while the VPN is. Or it just doesn't allow you to play the videos.
I mean sure, but I think the point is that the average Joe would probably already have a collection agency harassing them while he's still in the "it's all just a misunderstanding probably. Let's just ask him again." situation
Do you mean pasting a link and proton shows it inline? Or pasting a link to an image and proton includes it as an attachment? Or something else entirely?
If it's too hard to protect, you shouldn't have it in the first place.
So all the misery in the world is related to webdevs trying to parse html with regex?
You bastards.
I also wonder what the OS is like. I need things like OxygenOS from OnePlus or something close to stock android.
All the bullshit UI from Samsung or Huawei or whatever is just atrocious. Terrible UI, no longtime support. Extra account shoehorned in.
I've used the web clients for the past 20 years. I've only used Thunderbird/evolution/outlook in Company context.
Privately I don't send out that many emails.
Missed opportunity due complain about recall, bloatware, spyware and ads in an OS people pay for.
Cool! I haven't used an email client in over 20 years. But it seems like a very handy feature for those who do.
Happy to see it's available for Linux too!
The issue was related to the Linux scheduler. So if you had a different scheduler than what moet distributions have as default, you might not have experienced that issue.
There are a few people in the comments that reported that they compiled a different scheduler and that the issue completely disappeared
They can believe all they want. Unless it's ruled and a precedent is set, the statement is false.
I hope people stop believing they have that kind of power, but decide not to do it from the goodness of their heart or bad publicity.
I should hope the actual law still has more relevance than a ToS.