vyor
Oh that's cute
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Oh, so california just fully legalized stealing what you paid for?
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Oh, so california just fully legalized stealing what you paid for?
Oh, so california just fully legalized stealing what you paid for?
This is more of a wording thing. It's just forcing storefronts to be honest that they're selling licenses to a product, not the product, because they can take away your access to it at any time. It doesn't apply to stuff that has permanent offline downloads. It's mostly about live service games and other always online stuff. The article uses the game "The Crew" and Sony's attempt to remove purchased shows from people's libraries because they were getting rid of that content as examples of what it applies to.Oh, so california just fully legalized stealing what you paid for?
Yar, two can play at that game matey!Oh, so california just fully legalized stealing what you paid for?
Yes, so instead of making that something companies can't do anymore they fully legalized it as long as the company changes it from "purchase" to "license"This is more of a wording thing. It's just forcing storefronts to be honest that they're selling licenses to a product, not the product, because they can take away your access to it at any time. It doesn't apply to stuff that has permanent offline downloads. It's mostly about live service games and other always online stuff. The article uses the game "The Crew" and Sony's attempt to remove purchased shows from people's libraries because they were getting rid of that content as examples of what it applies to.
Baby steps. Now they have to tell people what they're doing instead of hiding it in the ToS, which means it'll get more attention from the general public.Yes, so instead of making that something companies can't do anymore they fully legalized it as long as the company changes it from "purchase" to "license"
This is normalization.Baby steps. Now they have to tell people what they're doing instead of hiding it in the ToS, which means it'll get more attention from the general public.
It's always been completely legal. This practice was never some loophole or fell into a gray area, companies have always been allowed to do this. The goal of the law is to make sure consumers are properly informed about what's actually happening, which is certainly a step in the right direction. To make it illegal would require a complete overhaul of both copyright law (which needs to happen anyway) and the entire digital industry, neither of which a single state can do. It would probably be easier to mandate that companies give refunds for content they make unavailable, which they should.Yes, so instead of making that something companies can't do anymore they fully legalized it as long as the company changes it from "purchase" to "license"
Yeah, realizing I can use trees to... travel was how I got to the Deku early.Beds are great, but those won't get you over the huge cliffs. For that, you'll need the Crawltula and Bind+Follow (which I think you get almost right away?). You latch onto the spider and it crawls up the wall with you attached.
Also, you can climb over the trees if you haven't realized that yet.
Tbf this being Hoi4 ai it's equally possible for the Allies to lose because Britain Ai got it's navy stuck in the Med or the Soviet one threw.And then the Allies win anyway because the Nazis fucking sucked at logistics.
It doesn't end with just people making spinoffs with their favorite character, now somebody in mexico made a store with Doro as a theme.
View: https://x.com/nikkepedia_jp/status/1842068569435377935/photo/1