Check for yourself: https://gitlab.futo.org/keyboard/latinime/-/blob/master/LICENSE.md
You can release modified versions as long as they’re non-commercial and follow a couple of additional rules.
Check for yourself: https://gitlab.futo.org/keyboard/latinime/-/blob/master/LICENSE.md
You can release modified versions as long as they’re non-commercial and follow a couple of additional rules.
Happened with Lone Echo for me. It’s a VR game where you’re in a space station, and you move around in zero g by just grabbing your surroundings and pulling yourself along or pushing yourself off of them. I started reflexively attempting to do that in real life for a bit after longer sessions
Except the email in question is not a newsletter. Companies often use separate mail list services for important product announcements and similar things as well. Obviously there should be a process in place that removes you from these external services too when you delete your account, but I assume this is what broke down in this case
And science fiction somehow can’t be fascist?
You’re thinking of Edge, not Internet explorer
Interesting, that seems kinda unsafe to me. The one I checked was Ryanair, they fully prohibit batteries in checked luggage
That’s only for cabin luggage. In checked luggage, Lithium Ion batteries are completely banned. If a battery bursts into flames in the cabin, it can be handled with hopefully minimal damage. You do not want that to happen in the belly of the plane packed in closely between everyone else’s luggage with no way of getting it contained until the planes lands.
Are you seriously equating security software running on business systems with state violence / surveillance on people? Those two things are not even remotely comparable, starting with business systems not being people that have rights