I knew it's either your comment or a bunch saying how I'm peddling bullshit. I chose to be ridiculed on style instead of substance.
maynarkh
They were all invited to do their depositions in some flyover state. The only way there is using flights on Boeing planes.
/joke
They may have ironed that out, this article is talking about tech that is more than half a century old. We got from first aeroplane to man on the moon in less than that.
ugyanitt bojler eladó
Look, the problem with crypto is that while government backed currencies are somewhat abused by governments and financial firms, those two at least keep each other in check some of the time. Since crypto is completely unregulated, Wall Street can make it go up and down as it pleases. It's basically all Wall Street scrip.
Your premium is 116 EUR per month, plus the taxes people pay – which are much higher in those countries.
Nope, our system is exactly like the US system, except properly regulated. It's still private insurance, I pay a private company for medical insurance and make claims when I need to use the system. We just didn't let the industry grow as a cancer on people.
You have also traded your freedom.
What freedom did I trade away?
About the taxes, yes, I might pay more of them, but at the same time when I got burned out by my workplace, I could leave, get mental healthcare, rest, and get back into work on my own terms. I had no financial problems from doing any part of this whatsoever. What is that if it's not freedom?
I lead a happy and easy life. I am not rich by any means, I have a middle class existence, but can pay for nice travel holidays, hobbies, whatever. I don't know what exactly the US could give me except a constant anxiety from guns being everywhere, school shootings, a semi-fascistic government sliding further and further into tyrannny, and no public services whatsoever.
The UK is currently talking about banning tobacco entirely
The US is "talking about" stopping the whole democracy charade and installing a dictator. The fact that it's being talked about by a few members of the government does not make it inevitable or even likely.
New York is still trying to control soda sizes in the name of public health.
I hope so! I mean, I don't think that anyone should be prevented in going home, making a huge soda and dying of sugar overdose, but it is nobody's interest to be served one litre soda cups just so that they can feel how "generous" McDonald's is while they get addicted to sugar.
Canada now offers suicide as an option for people who would have a long (and costly) treatment with low probability of improving health.
While the US just bankrupts them and leaves the suicide part to them. Also, are you bringing up an example of a state not providing adequate care to justify abolishing all socialized healthcare altogether?
They have to allow sideloading for all devices their app store supports. So either cut off support completely and brick all old devices, or let people do whatever.
There is no loophole though.
Even if there was, the EU runs on civil law, not common law, which means the intent of the law trumps the wording, and there is no emphasis on precedents. So if an EU judge decides that Apple is fucking around trying to skirt the law, there is no change required to the law to slap them down.
There is no real loophole though. Apple latched on to some part of the Act to justify what they are doing and play for time, while pretending the rest of the Act does not exist. The Act says in no uncertain terms that Apple is not allowed to self-preference - meaning that the alternative app stores must have as much exposure and placement on their platform as their own.
I bet they won't be paying upwards of 200k salaries there though.
The iPhone workers designed, workers made, workers marketed, workers transported, workers sold and "landlords" got paid for. It really is a perfect illustration of the issue.
They still break new ground globally. The DMA/DSA has Japan follow the EU's lead for example, and the more countries adopt better regulations, the more the US gets pressured to follow.