You’ll get it once you grow out of your teens and a decade or two has passed.
You’ll get it once you grow out of your teens and a decade or two has passed.
I think I read in a gaming magazine in the late 90s that in Germany games are censored so that blood spilling from enemies is coloured green or in some cases the enemies are robots that spill black oil.
TIL. I concur that makes my comparison not so fair. Making stereotypes based on any skin color is still icky though.
Yeah, imagine if it was watermelons and the sign mentioned black people instead. Harmless, but no one would write that.
In Lapland you can casually pull a salmon from the river that’s worth 100€ in a supermarket in the south. So much food that the dog is feasting too.
This reminds me I need to smoke a side soon.
If you choose to do a task manually over and over instead of automating it, you might as well go dig ditches and hammer nails.
Is this accurate? How can it be so varied even on similar latitudes?
I bet that same spot is perfect for black metal in November.
I don’t care if they pull the plug on Twitter. My point was that if the EU bans one website, it sets a precedent for the future where it’s easier to do it again. The rules that could lead to Twitter being banned today might be sane but who knows about the future? Maybe they start blanket banning Lemmy or Mastodon instances if the fediverse grows so large that moderation can’t keep up?
We don’t need a precedent for the EU censoring the internet.
Nowadays you don’t usually even get to own the game after purchase.
It’s a cancer on humanity. Nowadays you have to pay extra if you want for example a keyboard without the pointless rainbow lights.
Negative emotions are of no value. Best to be avoided.
Who was exploited and how?
If cheap furniture made by compressing glue and sawdust together existed 100 years ago, I bet it would have sold well.
Same goes for shoes. Everyone’s wearing terrible plastic stuff nowadays.
Diablo 2 too, seems like it was just yesterday.
Probably was recorded in LP too.
It’s not unreasonable to start charging for an app like that if it is under active maintenance, that costs money for the company after all.
But the lesson for the consumer is: Don’t buy tools that rely on apps or servers ran by someone else unless you want to eventually start paying rent…
We need this in the EU too. Actually, every country should adopt this policy.