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Sorry, sir, I like shit.
Sorry, sir, I like shit.
I imagine it wouldn’t hurt as much as a whip, but probably equally intimidating.
Dare I ask which country speaks words that cannot be truer.
Edit: saw your instance…
巧妇难为无米之炊 – “even the cleverest house wife cannot cook without rice”.
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I think you are right, user generated content doesn’t seem to be protected. This is surprising to me, as user should hold the right to their content, which in my mind should enjoy stronger protection than personal data.
I am not a lawyer, but I believe in general, yes.
Git is not even that convoluted, as all the history is stored in the .git
folder within the repo. Unless there is some convoluted structure built on top, they would only need to move the repo folder to a trash disk, waiting to be formated.
That being said, GDPR is somewhat poorly enforced at the moment, unfortunately. I don’t know if you can sue the company and expect some result within couple of years.
I am not a expert or a lawyer, but I believe user actually hold the right to completely erase personal data:
The data subject shall have the right to obtain from the controller the erasure of personal data concerning him or her without undue delay and the controller shall have the obligation to erase personal data without undue delay
https://gdpr.eu/right-to-be-forgotten/
Note the word “erasure” as opposed to “anonymize”
User should have the right to delete their data stored by the company.
What if I am allergic to cicadas? The article doesn’t seem to specify that case.
This is a violation of GDPR, no?
EDIT: user created content is not directly protected under GDPR, only personally identifiable data is pertected under GDPR.
I think this is just 表弟 (younger male cousin). 老表 is too casual to be used as a tag in phone book.
This is why you buy laptop from companies that officially support linux.
I use a laptop to run home console, and its display can turn off just fine.
I was intentionally vague in my response, since I don’t want to confuse the reader. Specifically, the improvement I was referring to is when you run two monitor with different refresh rate or different scaling factor.
Yes, on wayland you will need to run a particular program as root to be able to read all keyboard input. See xremap or mouseless (unmaintained).
Since you already give the program plenty of trust to let it read all your inputs, I think running it as root is not outrages.
That being said, in an ideal scenario, we would be able to set fine-grained permissions like, allow to read keyboard input but deny communication with other app, networks, and storage etc. But I don’t know any OS that can do this.
A more straightforward way to remap key is to get a keyboard with QMK firmware, that doesn’t cover all the use case of ahk, xremap, or mouseless, but that don’t require you to trust another program to run as root.
It is the same on Windows, people can put a ahk script in your autostart, logs your password and send it to anyone on the internet, all without even invoking UAC.
So yeah, wayland is kind of important…
Basically, you should try it, if it works, keep using it; if it doesn’t, switch to xorg to see if that fixes your problem.
Wayland is newer, have better support for multi-monitor, and application cannot see what you are typing in other app (so they cannot log your key and send your password to someone else).
You didn’t translate the first character “干”, originally means “do”, and like in English, eventually evolved to “fuck”, like in “do me”.
To make things even worse, 干 also means dry, when using a different tone. And 爆 is also a cooking technique, where they stir fry diced (or sliced) meat with very high heat to cook, resulting in a crispy and dry exterior and juicy inside.
A famous joke is that 干爆鸭子 (when written) can simultaneous mean the delicious “crispy diced duck”, or “fuck the duck until it explodes”.
And this is the real game of monopoly, of course.