How? How do they profit off someone who refuses to view ads?
How? How do they profit off someone who refuses to view ads?
Who would pay for data on a person you can’t advertise to?
I don’t think they’ll care or miss you, to be honest. It’s not like they’re making money off you.
I wonder if there is a job where you test user interfaces by deliberately misunderstanding instructions? I feel I’d be good at it.
Immediately, our team went to the dam to open the gates. Before they could open, the flash flood hit them, and they ran away to save their lives
I’m surprised they had to send a team to open the gates, I’d have thought this could be done remotely.
They’re pulling older and older pieces of equipment out of storage, fixing it up, and sending it out.
They’ve given up trying to bombard Ukraine with naval assets, and surrendered the offshore oil platforms they were using as observation platforms.
They’re flying fewer and fewer sorties, the ones they do fly typically lob missiles from beyond the border, and they’re seeing mechanical failures because the few aircraft they do have are not being properly maintained.
The lack of equipment is definitely hurting them, make no mistake about that.
Unfortunately, they have no shortage of young men to send to their deaths.
The what now? What the hell takes an hour to update on a car?
Realistically, a government couldn’t notify every single map maker, but my view is that the map maker should be obliged to act when notified.
In the case of paper maps, if they were notified of the bridge, and proceeded to publish a new version of the map showing it as operational, then yes, they should face consequences. paper maps don’t provide turn by turn directions though, so less safety critical.
Not an obligation to proactively update the map, but if someone notifies them about a closure or other safety issue, in my view they have a duty of care to act.
Lawyers for the Paxsons allege that several people have tried to flag the washed-out bridge to Google and have included email correspondence between a Hickory resident who tried to use the “suggest an edit” feature in 2020 to get the company to address the issue.
If Google were notified of this, and failed to act in a timely manner, they should face consequences. Obviously they’re not the only people who dropped the ball, but they definitely failed this person.
Never put a locked door in the way of the fire brigade by the way, they will get in.
I probably should change it, I just haven’t bothered yet.
Most apps, including Lemmy apps, open links in an internal browser which does not have those features.
You’re insufferable.
Back to your echo chamber with you.
No, but having a handful of people who will never see their ads devalues the whole package.