Yeah. It's better than it used to be- you can get a reasonable output far easier than you could previously, but if it's going to fuck up anything it's going to fuck up the hands.
I've been playing this for a couple days now, I'm absolutely loving it.
Right when I think the game is done it's hit me with six more features and a bunch more stuff I can unlock. Plus I'm a LotR nerd so the plot is interesting.
Also, the mining songs are amazing and I love that.
I remember commenting in a sub and getting bounced by automod because I didn't meet a karma limit. Which is fine, lots of subs have karma limits. But it felt really high- I had a couple thousand karma at the time- and the mods explicitly wouldn't tell you what the actual limit was.
So I guess you're just supposed to let automod bounce you occasionally til you manage to hit their magic number.
It kinda can't, though. 'South Korea will be leveled' is basically the worst imaginable outcome, unless you're saying they'll nuke the friends SK invites. Realistically, 'no nukes/missile strikes at other countries' is probably going to be China's only requirement for assistance. Which would make it a horrible grueling land war. Which is going to suck with or without Russian ICBMs in NK.
I did most of my Reddit browsing via Baconreader, which wasn't going to be an option anymore. So it basically came down to learn how to use a different Reddit app- which I refused to do purely out of spite- or jump ship to Lemmy and learn that instead.
I feel like the distinction is that when they started the investigation they had no idea about the crimes. They were just looking for literally anything. It was a fishing expedition, basically.
Yep. I swapped my bookmarks, deleted my main account, and just kinda ceased using reddit almost entirely. I still have an alt I use very rarely to browse some niche subs, but that's about it.
It's definitely a potential security issue, but I don't really think it's realistically a large one. Hell, a keylogger would probably be worse for you than for me because I hardly ever actually enter passwords.
The lack of moving parts also makes SSDs drastically more drop resistant, and just generally less likely to die on you randomly. Not that they can't, it's just less common.
Fair use is a much more specific and narrow thing than most people think, and there's absolutely zero way this would be fair use. Not making money with it would definitely strengthen a fair use claim, but that's not the only factor. The other big one is whether it's transformative, and I can't see how remaking anything can be considered transformative.
Yeah. It's better than it used to be- you can get a reasonable output far easier than you could previously, but if it's going to fuck up anything it's going to fuck up the hands.