It would be nice if RTFM was always an option, but a lot of the time the documentation is woefully incomplete.
It would be nice if RTFM was always an option, but a lot of the time the documentation is woefully incomplete.
Also, how can they sue a company based in another country.
Honestly, the FTC should be in charge of this
The AI encouraged him to do it
I mean, I think people like Euler are geniuses. Dude created so many theorems that they had to start naming them after the second person to discover them.
They were saying they want the AI to tell them about relevant news in-between blocks of music, not that they want AI to pick the music for them.
That’s not at all what they were talking about
With all the ugly angles that sounds dangerous
You could also just stick it in a VLAN with no route to other networks.
They can’t if it’s never connected to the internet.
Brother is the way to go
Sharing isn’t the issue. The emulator was profiting from it.
If I copied your house key and sold it, would that be alright?
For the record, I support emulation, but I don’t lie to myself that it’s morally defensible.
The Steam Deck is a similar concept
But, my prediction for the majority of users is that the device will just connect to a vdi infrastructure that you pay monthly for.
It always drives me insane when I have to spec out a $4k system for execs that use it mostly to browse Facebook and LinkedIn. At least the devs get the same systems.
The key wasn’t used in a book or in the hex values for a flag. That’s like saying the formula for Coke can’t be proprietary because it could be put in a book.
Software can absolutely be proprietary, and that key is part of the software.
The emulator they shut down was being sold for a profit. They haven’t gone after Dolphin, which is free.
They’re not bogus. The emulator that shut down were selling a product using a proprietary encryption key owned by Nintendo.
That’s why Dolphin still exists.
Emulation is perfectly legal if you own the game.
That’s just because you don’t have an argument to refute what I said.
The reason regulations exist is because of how horrible things were when they didn’t exist.
Edit: See. When pressed for an actual response they dipped out. All you have to do is look at the history of the US post industrial revolution to know that libertarianism is by far worse than our current system, and that’s saying a lot.
It’s not unconstitutional if the companies give the info willingly.