found a movie, but […] it wouldn’t play
So it played… you /s
found a movie, but […] it wouldn’t play
So it played… you /s
Port forwarding allows a connection to reach your fiber in the first place.
Advertisers aside, it's a shame none of that money goes back to the manga authors.
https://www.malwarebytes.com/blog/detections/generic-malware-ai-dds
Items detected as Generic.Malware.AI.DDS can be various types of malware and will be examined and classified at a later stage.
It does not detect is as definite malware, but their trained AI engine seems to conclude or hallucinate a high likelihood. Which may or may not be true.
Or is this actually a virus?
We, you, and they can't tell from this alone. For a definite answer, a deeper analysis will have to be made.
Hamburg court. Notorious court for such digital rights cases.
Injecting a malicious undisclosed firmware/software update. Very private and secure. /s
mkv is not a file archive format.
It's a media container format. Like mp4.
Both can include [file] resources, but that's different from a file archive having and extracting to files.
The executable being packed in an executable format means it has to be decompressed on each launch. If it doesn't it means it's not saving any space anyway.
I don't know what packing you're looking for, but Windows applications are typically installed with installers. An executable compressed executable goes against this; unless you want to pack installers.
Traditional file compression works well enough. People know to launch an msi or exe or read a README. Introducing non-standard tools is not necessarily a good idea, and certainly is not intuitive to users not already familiar with it.
Are you saying there should only be owning housing? What do the people that can't afford a house or flat do? Is it entirely the states job to build housing then and give housing away?
will never be a reliable way to truly archive something
I think they're doing a damn fine job archiving something, and in reliable ways too
Pay what? A physical copy? A digital license for streaming on a platform? A digital rental? A month of streaming service that includes it? Taking free access and public libraries (like public broadcasting libraries), temporary or time-limited into account? There's way too much variance to make any reasonable assessment on this.
To get an idea of price variance, even without monthly services, which make individual consumption cheaper still, let's look at the value of digital products on Steam.
Comparing my Steam account value calculated by SteamDB, the "lowest value" is 23% of the "value today". Taking into account that prices reduce significantly over time, you could put it much lower.
How do you expect people to calculate "if you had to pay for every item"?