

Sounds a lot like a license troll. Probably the specific court and potential violation of a law were picked with care. Perhaps they looked through valve’s terms in advance to find a loophole, design their own terms to exploit that etc.


Sounds a lot like a license troll. Probably the specific court and potential violation of a law were picked with care. Perhaps they looked through valve’s terms in advance to find a loophole, design their own terms to exploit that etc.


My take after reading the response as well: I think it’s good that 404 reported this. Also, I think Proton acted responsibly. If you don’t read the 404 headline with a “Proton is a snitch!!!” mindset but more as “This is a thing that happened”, then there is some value in this story. Proton had to cooperate, they explain why and what users can do to minimize risks. Be aware.


Agree and this is very informative about that: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xA9Xq7hb6Q0
He also has another video somewhere to stress test some of the disk types I think
Recently took the leap to try it out and it’s surprisingly nice. Especially thanks to the automatic rollbacks, in case something breaks. Only took me a few years of getting nagged and learning about it, and multiple attempts at reading through the documentation.
But for a beginner? No way. NixOS has a serious documentation issue. Also the community structure is a big plus in Debian.


No clue where that is from and if it’s already in effect, but what’s marked here only talks about developers, not users. Still, what a world to live in


Curiously people seem much more privacy aware with these


Now what does that tell us about the sanity and safety?
Meanwhile, big AI vacuums up the entirety of music produced by everyone from piracy sites for profit and noone bats an eye