Does it matter, unless there’s an agreement that says the US (or some other place where Mozilla actually operates) will enforce Russian law?
Sure, and they can regulate it by blocking access to Mozilla. That’d be within their authority.That doesn’t mean Mozilla has to answer to them. Mozilla would be within their rights to ignore Roskomnador.Whether they should is another matter but they don’t have to respond.
operating within that country,That’s kind of an important detail there… as far as I know Mozilla does not operate within Russia.
I mean… yes? Generally laws only apply within the borders of their jurisdiction.What, are the Russian police going to come to the US and arrest the CEO of Mozilla Corporation?
Mozilla, as a law-abiding organization, must at least acknowledge the requests of a regulatory agency within its own country.TIL that Mozilla is a Russian company.But seriously why the hell would Mozilla be obliged to acknowledge this request? Do they have offices in Russia?
Letting people continue to drive like that will eventually lead to injury or death.Not eventually; it does already, and frequently.We collectively just accept it as “the cost of doing business”. A deal with the devil if you ask me.
Read the first paragraph or the headline of your link again, and then read what you wrote again. Slowly, If it will help.
I do know what you mean and I know there’s some weird British vs American English thing where sometimes parentheses are called brackets or something.
You can't take it with you, but you can't leave it for someone else either: Valve says you aren't allowed to bequeath a Steam account in a will
If an oven only has fan forced mode do i still need to set it to the fan forced temperature in recipes? Ie 160 instead of 180.
If an oven only has fan forced mode do i still need to set it to the fan forced temperature in recipes? Ie 160 instead of 180.
Read the manual. Some ovens compensate and lower the actual temp from the nominal temp when used in convection mode.
In this case it’s the same god so you’re covered.