My company sent out guidelines telling us not to put confidential shit in copilot. So they're already preemptively blaming us. Idk how they could enforce it though.
Being a child. My grandparents being alive. Not having to go to work. Being able to just go out and do shit and not be answerable to anyone until I came home.
I mean I guess I could just start living in some nice house and building shit but I feel like the length of time before someone has a very serious problem with that is not going to be very long.
That's the example they used. There's good reason for there to be tons of different shampoos. People have all different kinds of hair and conditions that make it so one size can't fit all. Tons of products are like this. Even if the product is just for entertainment, why is it such a bad thing to have a lot of choice?
It's capitalism, doing whatever is most profitable for yourself is the ethical choice according to these corporations. You're just working within the system they constructed.
Capitalism is a shit show and having healthcare tied to employment is horrible but is this person arguing that having a lot of options to choose from is a bad thing?
Should get one warning fine and if they fail to abide by that the entire company gets parted out to a bunch of smaller entities and their software gets changed to FOSS.
Prosecute everyone and make amends to all the people the orange shithead fucked with and countries he broke agreements with. Even that's no guarantee because he's demonstrated how quickly everything goes to shit if a soulless prick gets elected.
I use brave as my YouTube browser and it does seem to perform better than Firefox with unlock. There's frequently weird delays with Firefox where the ads get through a little and are then blocked(admittedly I probably only update it like once a month). I don't get that with Brave.
I can't answer the why but if you're snacking on stuff you have in the house. Stop buying it. Then you only have to resist your cravings when you're at the store.
Why would you keep talking to a 14 year old?