Because by offering the website in the UK they are doing business in the UK legally speaking. So they have to follow UK regulations or face the fine of up to the greater of 18 million or 10% of global revenue. If they operated in a country that wouldn't make them pay up for UK fine and had advertisers based in the a similar country then they could ignore it but that leaves only a handful of countries and basically no advertisers.
No it isn't on the UK to block the company. It's on the company to comply with the law by either implementing age verification or blocking access.
Lmao I saw the android portion and thought that was just how much you had on your phone. Was worried about how many tb somebody like that would have on a nas
I wonder how many of those unnecessary pings are from data collection efforts. We should have protections that prevent our financial data from being sold but I guess if women's health data isn't protected then its not surprising.
According to the article, the over 200 Venezuelans sent to CECOT (252 total prisoners - you can find other articles that state all are Venezuelan) were transferred to Venezuela and some people incarcerated in Venezuela - 10 Americans and an unspecified number of political prisoners - were exchanged.
According to NILC, there were at least 280 people sent from the US to CECOT so not all people have been released.
It's your spirit that is transported to another world, not your physical body. There are a lot of stories where the character is reincarnated as a different species and even some where the mc is reincarnated as an object like a vending machine.
A long time ago Elon promised that full self-driving would be coming to existing cars that had their self-driving package installed which was cameras only. Elon is probably sticking with cameras only to avoid a lawsuit.
Fun fact: Robespierre was nicknamed the incorruptible (prior to the reign of terror) for his strong moral convictions including his opposition to the death penalty.
Typically the dissenting members are in competitive districts. So if the policy works well they can claim responsibility by association, but if it goes wrong then they can say they didn't vote for it.
It's strategic voting for reelection while still accomplishing their agenda.
Sure but inflation will eat into that over time. The point of the market approach is you can withdraw that amount in real dollars for 30 years after accounting for interest and inflation
You've probably tried this but in case you haven't: try putting isopropyl alcohol in the gaps around the bumpers, it can clean the contacts and make the bumpers work again.
But yeah I've also has a ton of first party xbox controllers fail on me, although usually its the left stick or right trigger (I mostly play rocket league which abuses both) and was mostly the xbox one controllers so I've switched to more durable 3rd party controllers.
Because by offering the website in the UK they are doing business in the UK legally speaking. So they have to follow UK regulations or face the fine of up to the greater of 18 million or 10% of global revenue. If they operated in a country that wouldn't make them pay up for UK fine and had advertisers based in the a similar country then they could ignore it but that leaves only a handful of countries and basically no advertisers.
No it isn't on the UK to block the company. It's on the company to comply with the law by either implementing age verification or blocking access.