elvith

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 7 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago) (1 children)

Die Instanz ist kaputt, Zugang nur über Apps und Drittfrontends. Schon länger. Ich hab die letzten Tage nicht bewusst Posts von slrpnk gesehen, aber weiß, dass die regelmäßig in meinem All-Feed waren. Daher würde ich eher auf technische Probleme denn einen Block tippen. Wenn wir nicht ins Frontend kommen, kann das der Admin auch nicht.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 6 months ago

*Grindr-ing away!

[–] [email protected] 4 points 6 months ago

It's referring to both. The recompiler links to the Zelda project and basically tells you "if you want to haven an example how to.proceed/what to implement yourself after the recompilation finished, you can use the Zelda project as an example".

[–] [email protected] 15 points 6 months ago (2 children)

Well, usually those re-compilers or transpilers just translate the binary to some sort of intermediate language and then any backend should be able to compile it for your target system. So, in theory those handheld could be targeted. Problem with this project is that it's not just "start transpiler, load rom, click go and your port is ready". It's more like "ok, here's your game logic. Now implement the rest (or use several other projects and duct tape their libraries together to get what you want).

[–] [email protected] 18 points 6 months ago

Other people's password be like

JetBrains032024
JetBrains042025
Jetbrains052024
...

My JetBrains accounts be like

[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
...

[–] [email protected] 20 points 6 months ago (1 children)

If paying on a monthly basis, as soon as you pay for 12 consecutive months, you will receive this perpetual fallback license providing you with access to the exact product version for when your 12 consecutive months subscription started. You will receive perpetual fallback licenses for every version you’ve paid 12 consecutive months for.

So, in your example, you unsubscribe in month 15. This means, you paid 14 months so you get to retain the version from month three (which is 12 full paid months to 14). This means a downgrade to 1.0.x and not to 1.2.x

[–] [email protected] 9 points 6 months ago

Fifteen Million Merits, IIRC?

[–] [email protected] 67 points 6 months ago

I remember having a defective hdd in my PC. I brought the pc to the shop, where I bought it from to get it replaced under warranty. They told me they couldn't restore my data (I had backups) and asked if I wanted them to install windows on it. When they asked for my key I was like "FC..." and they responded "ok, we know that one, no need to spell it out" and proceeded with the installation

[–] [email protected] 4 points 6 months ago (7 children)

IIRC if you cannot do it because you never learned it it's "Je ne sais pas parler français"

[–] [email protected] 2 points 6 months ago (1 children)

Je suis dans ça mème et je ne l'aime pas.

Oui, j'ai appris la langue française à l'école aussi.

Non, je ne veux... sais pas parler français!

[–] [email protected] 21 points 6 months ago

Nah, it just marks your question as duplicate.

 

Abstract

Consent plays a profound role in nearly all privacy laws. As Professor Heidi Hurd aptly said, consent works “moral magic” – it transforms things that would be illegal and immoral into lawful and legitimate activities. As to privacy, consent authorizes and legitimizes a wide range of data collection and processing.

There are generally two approaches to consent in privacy law. In the United States, the notice-and-choice approach predominates; organizations post a notice of their privacy practices and people are deemed to consent if they continue to do business with the organization or fail to opt out. In the European Union, the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) uses the express consent approach, where people must voluntarily and affirmatively consent.

Both approaches fail. The evidence of actual consent is non-existent under the notice-and-choice approach. Individuals are often pressured or manipulated, undermining the validity of their consent. The express consent approach also suffers from these problems – people are ill-equipped to decide about their privacy, and even experts cannot fully understand what algorithms will do with personal data. Express consent also is highly impractical; it inundates individuals with consent requests from thousands of organizations. Express consent cannot scale.

In this Article, I contend that most of the time, privacy consent is fictitious. Privacy law should take a new approach to consent that I call “murky consent.” Traditionally, consent has been binary – an on/off switch – but murky consent exists in the shadowy middle ground between full consent and no consent. Murky consent embraces the fact that consent in privacy is largely a set of fictions and is at best highly dubious.

Because it conceptualizes consent as mostly fictional, murky consent recognizes its lack of legitimacy. To return to Hurd’s analogy, murky consent is consent without magic. Rather than provide extensive legitimacy and power, murky consent should authorize only a very restricted and weak license to use data. Murky consent should be subject to extensive regulatory oversight with an ever-present risk that it could be deemed invalid. Murky consent should rest on shaky ground. Because the law pretends people are consenting, the law’s goal should be to ensure that what people are consenting to is good. Doing so promotes the integrity of the fictions of consent. I propose four duties to achieve this end: (1) duty to obtain consent appropriately; (2) duty to avoid thwarting reasonable expectations; (3) duty of loyalty; and (4) duty to avoid unreasonable risk. The law can’t make the tale of privacy consent less fictional, but with these duties, the law can ensure the story ends well.

 

Der EuGH machte mit dem Schufa-Urteil deutlich, dass ein Score nur unter bestimmten Voraussetzungen zur automatischen Entscheidung genutzt werden darf und kritisierte die zu lange Speicherung von negativen Einträgen.

Nun hat sich der deutsche Gesetzgeber auf den Weg gemacht, eine Rechtsgrundlage zu erlassen und will mit dem neuen §37a BDSG eine „Lex Schufa“ schaffen, der:

Scoring legalisiert

und

automatische Entscheidungen basierend auf einem Score erlaubt

und dafür einige Do´s und Don´t enthält sowie Transparenzpflichten und Einspruchsmöglichkeiten auferlegt.

Es ist zu befürchten, dass die auf den ersten Blick recht kleinteilige Regelung (Entwurfstext siehe unten) weniger dem Ziel "Verbraucherinnen und Verbraucher zu schützen" dient sondern im Gegenteil neue Möglichkeiten des Scorings ermöglicht werden.

Der Entwurf des §37a sollte deshalb noch einmal auf den Prüfstand, der Versuch der sehr detaillierten Regulierung verbietet zwar einiges explizit, lässt aber darüber hinaus viel Gestaltungsspielraum für Scorings.

Am Rande: Mit der Reform wird die Datenschutzkonferenz der Aufsichtsbehörden institutionalisiert, so dass sie künftig ein stärkeres Gewicht als bislang hat.

 

Quelle: Karrikatur von Tjeerd Royaards

 

A friend of mine is a huge portal fan, so I made him this card for his birthday.

 

The Wall Street Journal reported that Meta plans to move to a "Pay for your Rights" model, where EU users will have to pay $ 168 a year (€ 160 a year) if they don't agree to give up their fundamental right to privacy on platforms such as Instagram and Facebook. History has shown that Meta's regulator, the Irish DPC, is likely to agree to any way that Meta can bypass the GDPR. However, the company may also be able to use six words from a recent Court of Justice (CJEU) ruling to support its approach.

 
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