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2 yr. ago

  • A small house for 74,000? Lol, you'd need at least double that in the Northeast part of America.

  • in before, "but I need my enormous vehicle because once every 13 years I haul 3 2x4's and am too dumb to use a roof rack or rent a truck for the day!"

    I win!!!

    My enormous eletric vehicle (plug-in Rav4) is powered from my home solar panel system, and I use it to transport my dogs to the park a couple of times a week.

    I'm completely guilt free!!!!😃

  • Firearms.

    It was fairly inexpensive before the pandemic. But since it's been a nightmare of price gouging.

    It's also one of those hobbies where buying one thing leads down a rabbit hole of spending.

  • Not if you buy at the dips like I did.🙃

  • I don't feel like contributing for free to some portal run by a private company.

    100%!!! The only thing I did differently was deleting all my usernames. I'm not contributing to all Reddit's ad tracking, AI training, privacy invading nonsense.

    I still go back to my favorite subs (r/gme_meltdown and r/buttcoin) to read only, but that's it. Also there's still tons of active BB boards (not on social media) for all my niche hobbies, soI really don't have a reason to.

    I'm not participating in that dumpster fire ever again. At best I'll rip content from Reddit to post here on Lemmy.

  • Im fascinated by the fact that people are starting to be monogamous with thier porn stars they watch.

    I might be the odd one out, but if I'm paying for porn I'm definitely getting the one that's like Netflix with a whole bunch of different shit on it.

  • Lol, do you even need it? The headline speaks volumes.🤣

    Almost 1 in 3 Brits between 18 and 34 years old have received unwanted contact from delivery drivers or other workers asking them out on dates or for sex, the UK's data watchdog has warned.

    The survey of over 2,000 British adults carried out for the Information Commissioner's Office found that, in total, 17% of people have had their personal information used for a romantic or sexual proposition after handing it over to a business.

    That figure rises to 33% in London, where such incidents are most common.

    "People have the right to order a pizza, or give their email for a receipt, or have shopping delivered, without then being asked for sex or a date a little while later," said Emily Keaney, a deputy commissioner at the ICO.

    "Our research today shows a disturbingly high number of people, particularly young people, are falling prey to these text pests," she added.

    In June, a female Etihad Airways passenger told The Guardian how she felt unsafe after a worker contracted by the airline found her phone number in the company system then sent her unsolicited text messages.

    "There may be, amongst some, an outdated notion that to use someone's personal details given to you in a business context to ask them out is romantic or charming," Keaney said. "Put quite simply, it is not – it is against the law."

    A growing number of firms, particularly in delivery, transport, or logistics, rely on gig economy or contract workers. These workers are not entitled to the same employment rights as full-time workers, the jobs can be precarious and badly paid, and turnover is often high. One consequence is that sensitive customer information, such as phone numbers and addresses, is accessible to casual workers.

    The ICO did not explicitly name any companies, but pointed to "major businesses" operating in food and parcel delivery.

    Its survey found that two-thirds of the UK public believe it isn't morally right to use personal details given for business purposes for romantic or sexual propositions.

    The regulator said it's cracking down on such occurrences, asking victims to come forward, and reaching out to companies to remind them of their data protection responsibilities.

    If a company is found not to be following data-protection laws, it can be fined up to £17.5 million ($22.1 million) or 4% of its global turnover

  • Lol, I wonder what full-auto looks like🤣

  • The problem most people have is their credit, not the mortgage payments. Both my mortgages (I'm not a landlord, but I do airbnb 3 months out of the year) are $1500/month, and most people pay that and more just for rent.

    Nevermind the fact that some people are eligible to buy a home, but think they won't qualify so they dont try. I was in that group with a credit score of 680, which is acceptable for the first time home owners program. I was accepted, and now I own 2 homes.

  • Same here. I'm a fiber tech for a cable company, and working 4×10's are awesome. I only work 2 extra hours, and I barely get more work than I did when I worked 8 hours.

    It's fucking awesome😃

  • Ok I get now. I can definitely see both sides of the argument, and it's not going to be easy to solve.

    Copyright law needs to be updated to deal with all the new ways people and companies are using tech to access copyrighted material.

  • What the article is explaining is cliff notes or snippets of a story. Isn't that allowed in some respect? People post notes from school books all the time, and those notes show up in Google searches as well.

    I totally don't know if I'm right, but doesn't copyright infringement involve plagiarism like copying the whole book or writing a similar story that has elements of someone else's work?

  • I never said it wasn't, I just said shit like that happens during war.

  • Got any testimony from Ukraine soldiers saying they kill POWs?

    If they have half a brain they probably wouldn't admit to that as it would be self-incriminating.🤣

  • I'm definitely getting an "opening scene from a Godzilla movie" vibes from this story.

  • War is ugly. That's probably happening on both sides. You try not killing a guy that's was shooting to kill you.