All of the above and more? There's always the risk of something falling through the cracks, so the more layers of security measures you add/can afford the better.
They published lots of popular franchises, the problem is that they never owned half of them and the other half are now owned by big labels like EA. Maybe they can recover some mid level franchises from the ruins Embracer is leaving behind but that's pretty much it.
Their are other European competitors that actually support open standards and most support GPG encryption of incoming emails so you are not stuck with them. And for storage nextcloud supports e2e encryption. Proton was always a tech-bro designed trap.
I think they just figured out they can offload the modernization of old games to the community. People will still have to buy the game to get the assets needed to play it legally.
You'll still need to buy the games to get the assets legally. EA is just checking if they can offload the modernization of old games they don't want to remake to the community to keep the revenue stream going without having to invest on it.
Using the actual word for reporting is not the same as using the word as an insult. Bowdlerizing news doesn't do anything besides making them uncleared.
That protects Trump, not the people following illegal orders. At least office immunity doesn't extend to the entire executive anywhere else in the world as far as I know.
Immunity for official acts is supposed to prevent the judges from doing a coup by arresting elected politicians, not to give the executive powers to ignore the other branches.
Think about the poor KPIs that will not be met otherwise. And try not to think about Goodhart's law.