I'd assume that it is using it fraudulently that is illegal. Quickly DDGing seems to agree that it is using fake ID that is illegal, but I'm not a lawyer.
Pen and paper, with the whole process watched seems the safest. There's still problems from non-independent groups choosing the election districts to banning/making harder for certain groups to vote, not to mention combining a bunch of elections into one to make it more complex and harder for new parties to appear at lower levels.
The Spanish flu, in particular the second wave, was different in that it killed a lot of healthy young people, quick. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... Also this chart on life expectancy at various ages, in particular around 1918, https://ourworldindata.org/wp-...
Untargeted ads. The ads are also small and clearly labeled. That was the reason that I first started using Google, and now, why I've kept with my browsers default search engine. Seems the browser people (SeaMonkey Foundation) get a bit of cash from me using DDG, which is good.
I'm aggressive with NoScript in SeaMonkey but typing eurousd in the url bar and scrolling down to the search option gives me the exchange rate at the top of the results, plus the SeaMonkey foundation gets a couple of cents (or less), which supports my preferred browser. The search result ends up as
No, it just takes the Supreme Court to rule that the Constitution says that Congress can outlaw a plant. There are various reasons that it is Constitutional from national security to interstate commerce.
Mail in ballots are great. Makes it easy to verify that my family, employees and congregation are voting the correct way, plus my son, the mailman can also make sure those mail in ballots from the wrong type of people get lost. None of that bullshit about secret ballots or just having to show up at the polling place and vote.
In 1994, OS/2 Warp v3 was released, with enough of a network stack to allow dial up network access (Warp Connect followed with a full network stack) and various internet tools including WebExplorer, a web browser that was mostly implemented as a DLL with the idea that the OS and applications could easily access HTML by linking to webexwin.dll. MS stole the idea and even the name, slightly changed, and ran with it.
Can you really sell (or give away) a copy of a book and then change your mind and demand it back in your country? Do you have to reimburse the person? What about interest and such?
I don't think an individual (or group) can actually pull the license for GPL software that is out in the wild. They can change the license for the software in their procession and release it under different terms but the original is still GPL. So foo v1 is GPL and later the author releases foo v2 under the MINE license, v1 is still GPL and can be forked. The actual name may be protected under trademark law so the v2 of the GPL fork may have to be bar v2.
And starting in 1731 or so, when the first copyrights started expiring , the courts eventually ruled that copyright does not exist in the common law and is a pure creation of the State, unlike real property whereby occupying it gave you rights, even without any statutes. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
What is the European trend? You just keep parroting one number (possibly 2) instead of a trend. If a country or area drops 10% each year for a few years then goes up by 2% for a few years, it is still a downward trend. You're like a space nutter, repeating the same shit over and over without considering the whole picture.
Mozilla moved away from static libraries, replacing them with fake libraries, basically just a list of object files that usually would have made up the static library as well as disassembling outside static libraries into object files and they also concated 8-16 source files together before compiling. All to speed up linking xul, which was taking hours on OSX and a long time on other platforms.
The Conservative government changed that last Federal election, as well as changing the voter ID requirements in such ways as to disenfranchise people, all on the advice of Americans.
We're talking about someone so uninformed that he is spending most of his time fighting a trade war with one of the few countries that the USA has a trade surplus with. I guess it is still true that to Americans, free trade means getting stuff for free, and then giving it to the Chinese.
People are nuts in some ways and have a knee jerk reaction to ban stuff without thinking things through when something bad happens. The more complex something is, the easier to ban. Shit the ban on selling nuclear weapons has 100% prevented gangs from nuking each other so far. Banning guns on an island like England works fairly well so far (may be changing with 3D printing) so people stupidly think that banning knifes will work the same without thinking that you can build a knife as easily as breaking a window and using some tape to make a handle. Clubs are even harder to ban but I can imagine a call to ban them after a large scale clubbing attack.
Actually it sounds like it is inevitable, perhaps as soon as 500,000,000 years. This is due to solar induced global warming. The Sun transmutes hydrogen into helium, helium is denser then hydrogen and causes faster fusion. At least that is what is considered settled science.
She lit it when the lake was frozen, probably just a small hole where the methane was venting and that's what she lit. Now in the summer, there's no ice and methane is escaping all over the lake, much more explosive given a spark.
The things with guns, it is easy to kill (or injure) someone on a moments impulse, it is easy to kill someone at a distance, it is easy to kill someone accidentally, it is easy to decide to kill someone and kill them. Knives, bats and such only have some of these problems. It's hard to knife someone in fit of road rage and even when the bats come out, usually no one dies. Not too often that someone accidentally kills someone with a bat or knife. It is a lot more personal when someone does decide to kill someone with a bat or knife and running and such is a more valid defense against them.
There's a movement to totally ban handguns here, polls show lots of public support, but i don't see the point as they're so highly regulated already. The problem is that there are enough out there already and it isn't that hard to go south, buy one and smuggle it back.
We're talking about whoever I phoned kicking me off (well hanging up) for using certain words, not the carrier. Do you really not understand the difference?
I'd assume that it is using it fraudulently that is illegal. Quickly DDGing seems to agree that it is using fake ID that is illegal, but I'm not a lawyer.
Pen and paper, with the whole process watched seems the safest. There's still problems from non-independent groups choosing the election districts to banning/making harder for certain groups to vote, not to mention combining a bunch of elections into one to make it more complex and harder for new parties to appear at lower levels.
Why? It's a fork and can grow in any direction as long as the original license terms are met, not too hard with GPL.
The Spanish flu, in particular the second wave, was different in that it killed a lot of healthy young people, quick. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... Also this chart on life expectancy at various ages, in particular around 1918, https://ourworldindata.org/wp-...
Untargeted ads. The ads are also small and clearly labeled. That was the reason that I first started using Google, and now, why I've kept with my browsers default search engine. Seems the browser people (SeaMonkey Foundation) get a bit of cash from me using DDG, which is good.
All I get is a blank page with a yellow bar at the top warning me about the page only being partially encrypted.
I'm aggressive with NoScript in SeaMonkey but typing eurousd in the url bar and scrolling down to the search option gives me the exchange rate at the top of the results, plus the SeaMonkey foundation gets a couple of cents (or less), which supports my preferred browser.
The search result ends up as
No, it just takes the Supreme Court to rule that the Constitution says that Congress can outlaw a plant. There are various reasons that it is Constitutional from national security to interstate commerce.
Mail in ballots are great. Makes it easy to verify that my family, employees and congregation are voting the correct way, plus my son, the mailman can also make sure those mail in ballots from the wrong type of people get lost.
None of that bullshit about secret ballots or just having to show up at the polling place and vote.
In 1994, OS/2 Warp v3 was released, with enough of a network stack to allow dial up network access (Warp Connect followed with a full network stack) and various internet tools including WebExplorer, a web browser that was mostly implemented as a DLL with the idea that the OS and applications could easily access HTML by linking to webexwin.dll.
MS stole the idea and even the name, slightly changed, and ran with it.
Can you really sell (or give away) a copy of a book and then change your mind and demand it back in your country? Do you have to reimburse the person? What about interest and such?
The House of Lords was the highest court, or basically the Supreme Court.
I don't think an individual (or group) can actually pull the license for GPL software that is out in the wild. They can change the license for the software in their procession and release it under different terms but the original is still GPL.
So foo v1 is GPL and later the author releases foo v2 under the MINE license, v1 is still GPL and can be forked. The actual name may be protected under trademark law so the v2 of the GPL fork may have to be bar v2.
And starting in 1731 or so, when the first copyrights started expiring , the courts eventually ruled that copyright does not exist in the common law and is a pure creation of the State, unlike real property whereby occupying it gave you rights, even without any statutes.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
What is the European trend? You just keep parroting one number (possibly 2) instead of a trend. If a country or area drops 10% each year for a few years then goes up by 2% for a few years, it is still a downward trend.
You're like a space nutter, repeating the same shit over and over without considering the whole picture.
Mozilla moved away from static libraries, replacing them with fake libraries, basically just a list of object files that usually would have made up the static library as well as disassembling outside static libraries into object files and they also concated 8-16 source files together before compiling. All to speed up linking xul, which was taking hours on OSX and a long time on other platforms.
The Conservative government changed that last Federal election, as well as changing the voter ID requirements in such ways as to disenfranchise people, all on the advice of Americans.
We're talking about someone so uninformed that he is spending most of his time fighting a trade war with one of the few countries that the USA has a trade surplus with. I guess it is still true that to Americans, free trade means getting stuff for free, and then giving it to the Chinese.
Be a lot cheaper to synthesize it on the Earth then to process tons of lunar regolith.
People are nuts in some ways and have a knee jerk reaction to ban stuff without thinking things through when something bad happens. The more complex something is, the easier to ban. Shit the ban on selling nuclear weapons has 100% prevented gangs from nuking each other so far. Banning guns on an island like England works fairly well so far (may be changing with 3D printing) so people stupidly think that banning knifes will work the same without thinking that you can build a knife as easily as breaking a window and using some tape to make a handle. Clubs are even harder to ban but I can imagine a call to ban them after a large scale clubbing attack.
Actually it sounds like it is inevitable, perhaps as soon as 500,000,000 years. This is due to solar induced global warming. The Sun transmutes hydrogen into helium, helium is denser then hydrogen and causes faster fusion. At least that is what is considered settled science.
She lit it when the lake was frozen, probably just a small hole where the methane was venting and that's what she lit.
Now in the summer, there's no ice and methane is escaping all over the lake, much more explosive given a spark.
The things with guns, it is easy to kill (or injure) someone on a moments impulse, it is easy to kill someone at a distance, it is easy to kill someone accidentally, it is easy to decide to kill someone and kill them.
Knives, bats and such only have some of these problems. It's hard to knife someone in fit of road rage and even when the bats come out, usually no one dies. Not too often that someone accidentally kills someone with a bat or knife. It is a lot more personal when someone does decide to kill someone with a bat or knife and running and such is a more valid defense against them.
There's a movement to totally ban handguns here, polls show lots of public support, but i don't see the point as they're so highly regulated already. The problem is that there are enough out there already and it isn't that hard to go south, buy one and smuggle it back.
We're talking about whoever I phoned kicking me off (well hanging up) for using certain words, not the carrier. Do you really not understand the difference?