Not just games, movies too. And anything that gets Tencent money ends up with subtle pro-China propaganda.
Not just games, movies too. And anything that gets Tencent money ends up with subtle pro-China propaganda.
That doesn’t mean it’s good.
How do you figure? If the DRM depends on them, doesn’t that give them the power to destroy it?
That’s the thing, though, it’s not a loophole. It’s intentional. It makes a good headline, but it doesn’t really do much.
Much like California’s other good-sounding laws, the fine print is what gets you on both ends, both in the law and in the EULA you agree to when signing up that’s going to say that all transactions are explicitly a terminable and revocable license.
ClamAV is great for exactly one thing: checking the “has antivirus” checkbox on company security audits.
Don’t get me wrong, it’s a real AV product, but there’s no real need for it. You’ll get much better results just being careful about what you run and having a system and network firewall. And not running everything as root.
Direct link: https://gamebanana.com/mods/543673
Looks mostly cosmetic.
We can’t see your library. Compare them yourself and see.
They probably changed their site.
It won’t.
Or at least it really shouldn’t. I can’t imagine that happening. I wouldn’t hesitate to do it on my own phone.
Disable it and find out. It’s easy enough. You can reenable it if it breaks something.
How much you’ve downloaded compared to how much you’ve uploaded. If it’s equal, it’s 1.0. If you’ve uploaded twice as much as you’ve downloaded, it’s 2.0.
Also potential security vulnerabilities in the torrent client. But that’s uncommon and they fix them as they’re found.
They don’t connect to your computer like you’re thinking. There is a connection, yes, just like when you’re downloading you connect to other people’s computers. You can see them in the peer list.
The explanation is that it’s random. Generate enough random strings and you’re bound to get everything.
Noted, I will avoid it. Thanks for the warning.
It’s not needed because it’s currently mostly working for them? You’re going to need to use full sentences if you want to communicate, I’m afraid.
They already have several VMs, containers, and want a full desktop on one. If it sounded like going down to one physical server would be appropriate, I would have recommended it. But condensing whatever they’ve got now would be a huge pain, especially if they find out it doesn’t work and they have to start over and go back to VMs and containers.
Why what?
Considering you can assign any IME to any file, that means technically it supports everything from plain text to proprietary binary data.