I’ve trapped my fingers in a car door because I had my hand on the roof, leaned over to close the door with my other hand and didn’t move the other hand in time.
I’ve trapped my fingers in a car door because I had my hand on the roof, leaned over to close the door with my other hand and didn’t move the other hand in time.
One thing we did was tried to hurdle all of the hedges along the street. I tried to film it once, but it was dark and trying to ride a bike or a skateboard along the pavement (so there was - in theory - less camera movement) while my friends were doing it wasn’t that easy.
Thank you, Elon Musk.
Would be kind of hilarious if they didn’t use Chicago Style.
Furthermore, what’s even the point of open standards if you don’t want them to be adopted.
Well, yes. There does seem to be a lot of “we want open standards but we don’t want big companies to use them” among fediverse users.
I’m pretty sure most people don’t want it to…
Publicly available =/= public domain.
Its not piracy to just webscrap everything for data…
Yes it is.
Authors need to be able to make a living from writing, unless you want far less books to be written. And there is some logic in allowing them to leave some sort of rights to their family, even if it’s only for like 10 years.
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Now, all that being said, my personal opinion is fuck the US legal system and fuck copyright.
Some form of copyright has to exist, and - as angrily explained to me by authors - it needs to extend somewhat beyond the life of the author. I’m certainly never going to agree with it being indefinite though.
I’m amazed that it’s taken this long for a high profile lawsuit about it.
Meh, if it dies it dies.
The sheer amount of ads on youtube is what’s making people use ad blockers. Two unskippable 15 second ads after one minute of a ten minute video is ridiculous.
Was going to say, that seems very unlikely.
Depends how much the subscription is, tbh.
The problem is, will being owned by MS make any of that any better?
It almost certainly is in the EU.
The thing is that for medium to large companies it’s probably less expensive to pay people a nominal fee for pictures than it would be to risk being sued by, say, Disney, Nintendo, WWE or Games Workshop (to use some famously litigious companies).
Yeah, that seems an odd UI quirk to me.