I'm curious to see what parts of the Privacy Act they actually broke. As much as the technology part of it makes sense (if it's unencrypted it's your fault), can we really argue properly either way without knowing exactly how Google was determined to be in error?
I'm curious to see what parts of the Privacy Act they actually broke. As much as the technology part of it makes sense (if it's unencrypted it's your fault), can we really argue properly either way without knowing exactly how Google was determined to be in error?
It actually allows you to install it on two computers (laptop and PC). So not too bad if you have one of each and want a copy of Office.