

Why does Reuters, or the BBC for that matter, think I’ll pay a subscription when ads outweigh the story?


Why does Reuters, or the BBC for that matter, think I’ll pay a subscription when ads outweigh the story?


There were a few sites that would run scripts for you during Rexxit. The one I used would poison your data at random times over a few days to be sure of infecting backups. The last round was a deliberate violation of the TOS and offensive enough to force them to remove it immediately. Worked like a charm, as I recall.


Had an account there – briefly – 10? years ago. Deleted it as soon as I noticed my employer’s personnel office activity and posting non-existent “jobs.” Realized that LinkedIn is only useful as a data harvester and HR honeypot.


Europe has an age-gated social media ban? Is this where Australia got the idea?
Good idea
Hopefully not


I can see good arguments on both sides. On one hand, the current mechanic hands every member state a veto on everything. On the other, if too many members get dragged into domestically unpopular adventures by a foreign majority, other countries will withdraw, either formally or by simply refusing to participate in Brussels.
Then again, given that one of the Heritage Foundation’s (ahem) “Trump Administration’s” stated goals is to dismantle the EU, perhaps Merz’s government are simply useful idiots


In my defense, it was before dawn here. I’ll do better next time :D
FWIW, I generally agree with you about “Why bother?” With regard to Americans. We seem to have become a population dominated by zealots of one ilk or another in all the federally overrepresented states. It’s exhausting.
Most days, I think the US would be better off if Cornwallis hadn’t surrendered.


I don’t know why anyone bothers.
And yet, here you are. Feel free to stop at any time


Since they’re rights, they are inherent. You don’t get to vote on them


Nice ASSumption. Actually, yeah, I’d say exactly the same. Human rights are human rights. Fortunately, it isn’t up to people like you to decide who gets them


one of their members
Isn’t collective punishment a violation of human rights, according to the UN?


Because Prohibition and the War on Drugs worked so well in the US, I guess?


The trust problem in open source is that we can audit the published code, but we have no assurance that what’s published is what’s running


A lesser violation of privacy is still a violation of privacy. “It could be worse” isn’t a particularly persuasive argument


I thought the right to assemble and to communicate was a fundamental human right agreed by all UN member states?


Great gods. You sound like my father. That isn’t a compliment.


Now that I think of it, most non-native speakers on my experience can manage that sound. Those who can’t substitute /d/ like native speakers whose dialect doesn’t include it.


Does this really change anything for the EU? It reinforces the need to avoid US based tech, but they’re already moving in that direction. This may speed them along
I’m in the US. Guess I just haven’t tried to access them on mobile Safari in a while since this was new to me.
I generally find NPR the most bearable of US news outlets. I also used to run a member station newsroom and reported for the network a few times during those years.
BBC lost credibility several years ago for hosts talking more than guests and putting words into the guests’ mouth. Their paywall was just a curious additional insult.