Only for direct sales. Prisons could still just go buy through an intermediary, unless the first party sale contract also forbids that. Even then, it's questionably not enforceable. It'd be like me selling my car, but doing so with a contract stipulating that the buyer can't re-sell the car to someone that may use it for a particular (and legal) purpose.
"Sharing" is a funny way to word a headline. They are selling it, for a profit, because it's legal. It's immoral and shady as hell, but "prevent it or expect it" applies here.
That's not always a choice, without hurdles. I have a truck with it, but I would have no idea how to disable it short of cutting the antenna wire for it.
The most recent update was over 30 years ago, and it was basically "don't let Congress give themselves pay raises during the current session". It basically means they get the raise if/when re-elected, instead. It's moot, because many make their real money in insider trading and "campaign contributions". That only took ~200 years from when it was first proposed...
So they sell it all to a shell company in India, which then resells it to China. We all know how this works without actual penalties and actual enforcement. GDPR is successful because it has actual teeth, even for companies that are not HQ'd in Europe (but do business with EU citizens).
I don't nave a citation, but in general, layoffs are usually used to cut costs. Spending less means more profits. More profits generally means the company looks better to the investors, and hence, better stock price.
I get Copilot to bail on conversations so often like your example that I'm only using it for help with programming/code snippets at this point. The moment you question accuracy, bam, chat's over.
I asked if there was a Copilot extension for VS Code, and it said yup, talked about how to install it, and even configure it. That was completely fabricated, and as soon as I asked for more detail to prove it was real, chat's over.
1000mbps / $100 / month