Plagiarism isn't just using someone else's work. It's when you use someone else's work and claim it was your own. The programmers aren't plagiarizing as they're being freely admitting it's not their work.
To be fair, I imagine those rules were developed for use with physical writing, when minimizing space used up was more important. Nowadays, even as a native speaker these headlines just take extra effort to parse without much of a point.
Yeah this feels like Wizard of the Coast's first response to the OGL drama. Make some changes that are technically better than the first terrible system, but is ultimately still completely unacceptable. WotC eventually had to walk back everything, we'll see if Unity does the same.
For it to really stick, it needs to be enshrined in law. Until then it's just a temporary FCC policy that could get easily removed at some point in the future.
Very high priority isn't a number that you especially want low (or high), in fact it's probably not good for it to be 0. It's just what is considered important to work on. Once those are fixed, even if no new problem crops up, they'll just relabel existing bugs that they want to focus on getting fixed.
This is in contrast to the 15-minute bugs, that you do want to go to zero.
You might find just the inbuilt linux (crostini) under chromeos is fine..
Crostini is only sort of built-in Linux. It's more like a built-in Linux VM, and performance suffers a bit because of it. If they're not doing anything heavy, you should be correct, it'll be fine.
It's pretty easy to see on r/askeconomics. All top-level comments there require mod approval, but will add to the number of comments while waiting for approval. So it's pretty common to see posts with 10+ comments listed, but nothing besides the pinned automod comment is visible.
Plagiarism isn't just using someone else's work. It's when you use someone else's work and claim it was your own. The programmers aren't plagiarizing as they're being freely admitting it's not their work.