Wow I just looked up the case of the Hungarian protestor, Maja T.. That's almost exactly the same stuff that's been happening in America lately. Despicable jow my country is failing in these areas, again...
Crotaro
Alexandra is the hero students (and scientists) all over the world need! And I'm so glad that my former profs acknowledged and recommended Sci-Hub to us. So many people wouldn't be able to graduate without debt (or "even more debt" for the Americans) otherwise.
deporting someone to a place where they get starved, shot or lynched should not be permitted in a civilized nation
You're talking about the one American student who might get his student visa revoked? Because the other three are EU citizens and would only be banned from entering Germany (still a very harsh punishment and I don't think justifiable, especially without actual conviction). So they could still freely move in the rest of the Schengen Zone if I understood correctly.
Not only is it voluntary (can confirm that 1&1 doesn't block the subset of sites I just now tried out which are on the list) but Germany's approach seems to be pretty tame in comparison, still. Doesn't make it good, but a lot less bad than it seems by just reading the highlighted section.
While the CUII website lists 24 platforms for blocking, at last count the exposed list contained well over ten times more domains/subdomains, over 300 in total. For perspective, Germany’s site-blocking program is very modest when compared to schemes in the UK, France, Italy, and Spain, for example, where thousands of sites are blocked with information on domains mostly restricted.
Holy cow that's a horrible take. Please, if you can spare the time and money, come visit our country and don't just look at the few high-criminality places or the corruption of key politicians. Yes, they exist and should be criticized, but if your conclusion from that is to think that Germany is still just like during one of the most horrific regimes, then you've been grossly misinformed and need to experience the daily reality instead.
That's much more than I would have guessed, but I learned that anything to do with the universe just explodes my concept of scaling.
Hard agree!
From what I read online, it seems that they may have partaken in criminal offenses (read something about storming a building with improvised weapons), but deporting someone before their trial is due and they have been convicted, is not how it should work in a supposedly-civilised country!
Unfortunately, you're probably right
Immediately downloaded the video just in case it gets taken down!
I'm German and my father is such a Trump fanboy, it's sickening. I used to immediately debunk the hyperlinks he'd send to facebook or group chats, but he's been pretty quiet to me lately. I have lost all hope of changing his stubborn mind until actual mass executions are committed, so I'm just collecting all this shit to throw in his face afterwards to at least get the satisfaction of showing him why I was against this coming regime long before mass executions.
As @apotheotic@beehaw.org mentioned, that is actually not allowed and against the spirit of the "cookie banner law". But since hundreds, if not thousands of sites break this law, it takes quite the time for government workers to sift through all of that (provided they even get around to it).
Big agree on all of that, including the Any Austin recommendation!
Skyrim is amazing for this kind of mindfulness with its environments. The NPCs are a little so-so (once you spend an extended amount of time at the same location) but you can't go wrong with setting up campfire and just taking in the wilderness and everything around you. X4 Foundations actually is pretty great, too, for this vibe-intake, when you land on a station and just exist (or sneak into another captain's ship and see where it takes you)
That is an excellent suggestion!
I recognise that for almost any one task, Linux has a solution that works better than Windows. My issue is just getting Linux to run not only one specific thing but all the dozens of programs with each having their own dependencies and possible quirks without losing my mind, weeks of my life, data or all three.
If Valve (or really any other large entity capable of handling this for tens of thousands of users) stepped in to act as the guide for setting it all up in a safe manner and such that it just works without constant need for tweaking (unless you want to stray from the "installation wizard"), I could see Linux gain a big surge in users.