

Two wolves, a shadow dog, and a barbarian pretending to be a wolf
walk into a bar. The bartender says “canine help you?”
Two wolves, a shadow dog, and a barbarian pretending to be a wolf
walk into a bar. The bartender says “canine help you?”
PlayStation Portal(?)
PSP actually stands for PlayStation Portugal.
Do what must be done, Frog Wife.
I feel lucky to have been present for the specific set of weird circumstances that it took for that combination of words to make sense. Thank you! 😄
pizza Marinara doesn’t have cheese at all and originally didn’t even have tomato sauce
So…bread?
That’s just a longer way of saying “reward them for taking games away while you can”…
Remove Your Media LLC (RYM) is believed to have acted frequently on Crunchyroll’s behalf, per testimony on social media and an extensive report by Anime Motivation this year. RYM is also among the top six most active reporting companies in the world (placing fifth), with over 680 million URLs reported. The top six included Link-Busters.com (1.52 billion links reported), MG Premium Ltd. (966 million), Rivendell (900 million), comeso GmbH (728 million) and BPI/British Recorded Music Industry Ltd (627 million).
I’ll take entities that the world would be better without for 100, Alex.
Also, correct me if I’m wrong, but isn’t the content the same content that they semi-recently made impossible to access in any legal way? The stuff that they’re refusing to even sell access to?
Because if so, they can fuck right off even more than most copyright hawks.
If by “grab”, you mean “pirate”. Don’t reward them for taking games away.
Its characters cost as much as $63,000 in cryptocurrency, despite the fact that I’m not entirely sure what you can do with them once you own them
My guess: what cryptocurrency was originally invented for; money laundering.
So she asked me, ‘What was your dog’s name growing up?’
And then she emptied her bank account, having just learned the final security question answer.
I was positive that the Wedgwood scale had to be fictional but nope! That Josiah dude was WEIRD 😄
Personally, I’m surprised it’s so low, but I guess we don’t talk to each other 😁
The real Mojave is actually very tan
Makes sense since the sun is always shining on it 😁
I mean, isn’t the real Mojave desert quite beige? It would probably be weird if they made it green or blue 😛
But doesn’t the change open up for litigation in small claims court?
More like mandates it. For those who live in the country to even have ACCESS to it. The vast majority of Steam users don’t (while the US has more users than any other single country, it’s still only ~14m out of 120m) and would also need a lawyer licensed to practice in both countries afaik.
So nah, I don’t suspect that this change will benefit the users in general, rather the opposite…
I don’t think it is. If it’s anything like the US court systems I know more about (criminal, juvenile, immigration, main civil court), it’s extremely backlogged already.
And that’s even before considering jurisdiction and how much more a lawyer licensed to practice in at least two countries charges.
Even IF you decided to go through with it in spite of everything, you could easily end up spending thousands of dollars fighting an $80 case and STILL be likely to lose.
Which is why it’s best to let the user choose rather than force one or the other.
The reason why we always hear about companies forcing arbitration is because arbitration is best for them when it comes to the big stuff that the news report on, compared to court.
The reason why we never hear about the opposite is twofold:
it doesn’t happen as often and
“yamanii didn’t get their refund approved even though they were entitled to according to the rules” isn’t something that makes headlines or even makes it to court.
as I understand it, arbitration is still available (if both parties agree, I assume), it’s just not a requirement anymore.
Unless the OP is a forgery of some sort, you evidently DON’T understand it.
still seems to me that consumers are getting more options which is usually a good thing.
Nope. They’re switching from one mandatory method which favors companies liable to get into big disputes where a court case is advantageous to the consumer, which isn’t the case with them, to one that favors a company wanting to avoid a lot of issues too small to warrant a lawyer.
It’s not anywhere near as bad for consumers as when a utility company that poisons thousands of people forces everyone to corporate-friendly arbitration procedure (likely with the “neutral” third party much less neutral than the ones Valve used), but it’s certainly not GOOD for Steam users to not be able to complain without lawyering up.
Forcing you to shut up or go to court isn’t great either, though.
On the big stuff where they’re liable for a lot of money and you might be able to get a pro bono lawyer, sure.
On the small stuff, though, the prospect of having to pay for a lawyer and likely have your case thrown out by a judge for not being worth the expense and effort of suing a foreign company is probably going to deter a LOT of legitimate claims.
If, for example, I want to return a game in accordance with the rules and they won’t let me, I’m not gonna lawyer up and sue them from the other side of the Atlantic.
Removed by mod
“You are too poor for this mod, peasant”, basically.