The guy that invented time zones was solving a problem where each little town had their own time standard. I don’t think that was sustainable.
There will probably be a new app for the new chairs. You’ll have to upgrade the chair to keep using the app support.
That wouldn’t stop them from pursuing something in a US court if the other party is in the US. But even here, I doubt their argument would hold water in an actual trial, considering existing precedent.
It’s an open source project repository. It can be compared to the process descriptions in the patent. But patents and copyright don’t cover APIs, as decided in Oracle vs Google in 2021.
I’m saying this usage of reverse engineering is probably safe, but if you reverse engineered a way to process data that happened to match a patent, it doesn’t matter that you never saw the patent or original code, it can still be infringement.
Reverse engineering is legal, but if you still arrive at a solution covered by a patent, then that solution is illegal. But this shouldn’t be covered by a patent.
Some nations would be worth more per person to a data broker than others. How many billions have no Internet? How many have little money to spend on the companies the data broker sells to? Americans and Europeans would be at the top of the list, per capita, and could easily exceed $1000, and the total would just barely top 1 trillion.
Probably a serial number for the stamp. In the US, you can even pay online and print your own stamp, and it uses the barcode to track when you use it, so it can’t be used twice.
To be fair, customer support is often the way hackers bypass these protections.
The SMS vulnerability is not because of your apps. It’s because of the LTE protocol itself. It can be intercepted or redirected without touching your phone.
This might be the compost bin, which in California also includes food stuff, but bags are not allowed. Blue is for recycled bottles, cans, or paper.
Try pausing the video before you close it. Then it shouldn’t persist.
Many preinstalled app can’t be uninstalled but can be disabled. Go to settings-apps and find the disable button for that app.
But that shouldn’t happen if it’s only anonymous which is cached.
That doesn’t mean we should surrender and take away the only tool those people have to fight Amazon.
Because bits are not expensive anymore, and if we used 64 bits, we might run out faster than the time needed to convert to a new standard. (After all, IPv4 is still around 26 years after IPv6 was drafted.) Also see the other notes about how networks get segmented in non-optimal ways. It’s a good thing to not have to worry about address space when designing your network.