If people didn't do this it would happen faster. Not everyone has the luxury of immediately switching, just like the "move to another state" argument
This is ugly
Software updates have, more than once, changed my settings for things like autopilot without warning, and I've only discovered it when driving and turning autopilot on.
I feel like this point can't be overstated enough. When I need to go somewhere, I shouldn't need to reorient myself because the car receives software updates all the time. A device that's constantly changing is inherently unreliable, even if technically it's improving over time.
I'm not sure what specifically you're referring to, but algorithms are, generally speaking, code. You can purchase a company and their code.
They're going full-on theocracy, no?
I think they're mistaken, it's a shark actually. I would know because I saw the trailer for the documentary in theaters (Meg 2)
Mr Aslam added that since the signed bills were not received from the president even after 10 days, they automatically became law.
Sounds like a bad process. It's wild how much process and corruption are so often intertwined. At least in the U.S., government processes seem so rigid and unforgiving to everyday civilians
Huh, didn't know Kagi was building that. Seems pretty ambitious
I doubt it'll last much longer: https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2023/jul/16/lbry-closes-odysee-cryptocurrency-tech-sec-fraud-extremist
I'm not seeing this in the article. Is it from somewhere else?
I might be wrong, but couldn't their privacy policy stay the same but their internal policies of complying with government requests change with new ownership?
Flagging things like that usually leads to their removal