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Centurius

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Everything posted by Centurius

  1. You'll need to become a citizen first which will take a few years more, and no in general you really don't want to live in Japan as a foreigner.
  2. So the age of majority in Japan is 18 for voting, and most other stuff it's stil 20. You're going to have to wait six years.
  3. I mean yeah, but to what extent is UK-France even really abroad with free travel and all? Consent age is not the same as being an adult
  4. Public Administration and International Relations, Google Scholar is my bro.
  5. Anyone who is less than 16 has no business travelling abroad alone, certainly not get a permanent resident visa.
  6. So an article citing another article citing someone that doesn't work for Apple?
  7. For the purposes of the GDPR the staff are not third parties in the conventional sense but at the very least unpaid contractors. Their access to personal data is justified in as far as it is needed to execute their functions. To take a forum like this as an example, moderators need access to ip information and e-mail addresses to track repeat offenders.
  8. Causing financial damage to your company is a valid reason to be fired. Even in personal interactions (and especially when you mention your employer in your bio) you represent that company. If your words end up damaging that company's PR they absolutely have the right to kick you onto the streets.
  9. Right to be forgotten isn't being abused, it has a ton of caveats and essentially is only used to require hiding convictions that happened decades ago or very minor cases. More importantly it is being used to hide false accusations and slander. It was EU-wide the second the European Court of Justice ruled that way. Those reports are full of crap, GDPR sets a minimum. Every country within the EU has to observe that, if however a national law provides even more protections that law may be applied as well. GDPR requires informed consent, so they can't just get away with a quick disclaimer. The site needs to actively inform you and require you to agree to the tracking. The regulation also requires acceptance of your browser's do not track feature so that one finally actually works too.
  10. They've had well over two years to figure out loopholes.
  11. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_World_War_II
  12. Meh, the French resistance and Red Army had plenty of women fighting.
  13. Yes, there is no law preventing them from locking people out of a privately owned platform for violating a user agreement. That isn't discrimination, it is just contract law. If they actually completely bricked a device, a legal argument could be made but in this case no. Just because you feel something, it doesn't mean you are correct.
  14. One man in 4 months made that? I already look forward to what you can achieve with a full team and the timeframe for most mainstream releases.
  15. Simple, supply and demand. Companies can charge the higher amounts in Australia so they will.
  16. Yes and when you do that you agree it is for personal use only. So that thumbdrive you use to install it on your systems and a select few others. Mass distribution is no longer personal use and as such a violation of the agreement.
  17. I'm not saying this is good, it isn't But working on the Webcare team of the Dutch part of T-Mobile. A lot of people they let onto the Twitter account are full of shit.
  18. You really don't want to get into upgrading laptops without a lot of experience, even if you find a compatible part installation tends to be hellish.
  19. With the budget space exploration and science in general is getting the past 20 or so years? They need to cut corners wherever they can. If they can save money by going consumer hardware that can be the difference between upgrading this year or a decade from now.
  20. By the OP it seems to be a regional court? If so it only really sets a Danish precedent. EU precedents can only be set by the European Court of Justice.
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