This wasn't an overbooked flight, it was the airline wanting to transport its employees on a flight where all seats were taken by paying passengers. Auctioning seats may be "capitalist", but the only course of action that measures up to the standard of "fair" is for the airline to bend over and take the consequences of going short staffed at the destination where the employees were needed.
... A security flaw can be a patent violation; because a security flaw could be sufficient to allow a quantity in an order to be modified when the website operator did not intend that to be possible.
"No cops allowed" in the TOS isn't enough to keep cops out; I'm sure pirate websites have tried this and failed.
But the fact that "No cops allowed" can't be the whole of your legal armour doesn't mean that it can't be part of it:
1. Add a clause stating that the new user signing up indemnifies all other users against any harm of which the new user's violation of the TOS is a material cause; falsely claiming that you're not a cop is a violation.
2. Add a clause stating that the new user must insure their liability for that indemnification with company X. No confirmation of cover from company X? Then no new user account for you. Company X will charge the new user a premium of 1 trillion dollars if they admit to being a cop. And like any other insurance company, you have to consent to them ratting on you to the other insurance companies if they catch you lying.
Cops can still penetrate the legal armour, but now they have to lie to an insurance company. And "lied to an insurance company" is something that noone has enough lawyers to wash away.
So Valve have empowered the producers of commercial cheats to flag innocent players as cheaters simply by hosting their DRM servers on the same physical box as another non-cheat related service that gamers are likely to use.
But that power won't be abused of course because there's no correlation between charging money for enabling players to cheat in video games and being a douchebag </sarcasm>.
Plausibile deniability for using words covered by excessively broad trademarks: make Gg98r49;9pthl$mk the offical name of your game and have some anonymous third parties google bomb it with the title that you really wanted.
So i have to ask, suppose you purchased something locally snd the clerk gave you to much change, what would you do?
I think you'll find that most brick and mortar stores have a notice telling you to "check your change before leaving the counter as mistakes cannot be rectified later". Note that "mistakes" is unqualified, not qualified as "mistakes in our favour". Keeping excess change when the store makes a mistake in your favour is simply accepting that policy.
Caller: Could I speak to [Name] please?
You: What was the nature of your business with [Name]?
Caller:... yadda yadda unpaid debt yadda yadda...
You: You've just called a murder scene.
Caller: CLICK!
Harvesting organs from executed criminals is a non-justice incentive for a justice system, and like all other non-justice incentives for justice systems (e.g. American "Felony Murder" laws that reward cops who "accidentally" murder innocent bystanders at scenes of crimes in progress with additional crimes that they can accuse the perpetrator of), no good will ever come of it.
If they want to disclose the data requests, why not just engineer a leak from a disgruntled former employee already located in Ecuador/Venezuela/Iran/Wherever?
This wasn't an overbooked flight, it was the airline wanting to transport its employees on a flight where all seats were taken by paying passengers. Auctioning seats may be "capitalist", but the only course of action that measures up to the standard of "fair" is for the airline to bend over and take the consequences of going short staffed at the destination where the employees were needed.
Given that politicians are allowed to pay bribes to obtain unlisted numbers of private citizens.
... about what you're aiming at your foot when you install Windoze 10.
A saucepan for Cortana to boil your pet bunny in if you accidentally call her Siri.
That 29th of July expiry date is a lie; free upgrade offers for products pushed as hard as Windows 10 do not end.
But we'd need a secure password for access points through the membrane. I recommend 12345.
... A security flaw can be a patent violation; because a security flaw could be sufficient to allow a quantity in an order to be modified when the website operator did not intend that to be possible.
"No cops allowed" in the TOS isn't enough to keep cops out; I'm sure pirate websites have tried this and failed.
But the fact that "No cops allowed" can't be the whole of your legal armour doesn't mean that it can't be part of it:
Cops can still penetrate the legal armour, but now they have to lie to an insurance company. And "lied to an insurance company" is something that noone has enough lawyers to wash away.
So Valve have empowered the producers of commercial cheats to flag innocent players as cheaters simply by hosting their DRM servers on the same physical box as another non-cheat related service that gamers are likely to use.
But that power won't be abused of course because there's no correlation between charging money for enabling players to cheat in video games and being a douchebag </sarcasm>.
Plausibile deniability for using words covered by excessively broad trademarks: make Gg98r49;9pthl$mk the offical name of your game and have some anonymous third parties google bomb it with the title that you really wanted.
Be corrupt, dishonest, and treacherous in your dealings with those who practice censorship.
So i have to ask, suppose you purchased something locally snd the clerk gave you to much change, what would you do?
I think you'll find that most brick and mortar stores have a notice telling you to "check your change before leaving the counter as mistakes cannot be rectified later". Note that "mistakes" is unqualified, not qualified as "mistakes in our favour". Keeping excess change when the store makes a mistake in your favour is simply accepting that policy.
Caller: Could I speak to [Name] please? ... yadda yadda unpaid debt yadda yadda ...
You: What was the nature of your business with [Name]?
Caller:
You: You've just called a murder scene.
Caller: CLICK!
The MPAA and RIAA are thinking of the children a little too much here. Maybe we should put their executives on some kind of list...
They have their blood tested after arrest, and then are executed when a customer requires an organ.
Chinese Death Row: the only place where AIDS has overtaken drugs in the contraband market.
Harvesting organs from executed criminals is a non-justice incentive for a justice system, and like all other non-justice incentives for justice systems (e.g. American "Felony Murder" laws that reward cops who "accidentally" murder innocent bystanders at scenes of crimes in progress with additional crimes that they can accuse the perpetrator of), no good will ever come of it.
Another game in the genre: http://www.master-space.com/
This. Politicians are a renewable resource.
... but on this occasion the suck was in a customer's favour. He could spend all of it and still be morally superior to PayPal.
Kindergarten student sent to Hague Tribunal for pretending to use chemical weapons while playing soldiers.
If they want to disclose the data requests, why not just engineer a leak from a disgruntled former employee already located in Ecuador/Venezuela/Iran/Wherever?
Hell, change the Bible randomly; that wouldn't get noticed at all.
I think they already did that, considering the way the Bible uses italicization.
W00t! I got a "-1 disagree" from a butthurt authoritarian!
Saipan (Chinese people, but a U.S. territory)
A Chinese populated island in that part of the world that China doesn't claim to own? Standards in China have really fallen a long way.
No matter how much you dress this up as a piracy charge, hostage taking to secure the extradition of Edward Snowden is still hostage taking.