But Opera does give you a finer degree of control. You can actually either set 'Accept cookies only for the site I visit' or you can set 'Accept cookies' for the individual site.
Firefox has this option too. I'm not sure about IE however.
This would be like Grog inventing the wheel, then carving it square and charging extra for the round one. The internet is a collaboration; the more people who have access to it, the better it gets.
It's a funny society we live in. Violence is perfectly acceptable in America, yet nudity is a majoy no-no. The 'X' rating for movies, and the AO rating for games, exist solely for sexual content. That way, consumers know they aren't getting any of that awful hanky-panky in their media. Unfortunately, this system has the unfortunate side effect of painting a giant stigma over things that are X or AO-rated, so of course you won't find those games in stores (When's the last time you went to Walmart for a porno?)
It's perfectly reasonable that game makers will tinker with their game to get that magic M rating -- the threshold of what society tolerates. If we were a little more open about nudity then perhaps the AO rating could serve a better purpose, but as it is, wanton violence = M, a bare titty = AO.
But Opera does give you a finer degree of control. You can actually either set 'Accept cookies only for the site I visit' or you can set 'Accept cookies' for the individual site.
Firefox has this option too. I'm not sure about IE however.
This would be like Grog inventing the wheel, then carving it square and charging extra for the round one. The internet is a collaboration; the more people who have access to it, the better it gets.
Do you have bleachers to seat 20,000 people on an airplane? It's a nice little fantasy but there's no way a sport like that could ever be profitable.
It's a funny society we live in. Violence is perfectly acceptable in America, yet nudity is a majoy no-no. The 'X' rating for movies, and the AO rating for games, exist solely for sexual content. That way, consumers know they aren't getting any of that awful hanky-panky in their media. Unfortunately, this system has the unfortunate side effect of painting a giant stigma over things that are X or AO-rated, so of course you won't find those games in stores (When's the last time you went to Walmart for a porno?) It's perfectly reasonable that game makers will tinker with their game to get that magic M rating -- the threshold of what society tolerates. If we were a little more open about nudity then perhaps the AO rating could serve a better purpose, but as it is, wanton violence = M, a bare titty = AO.