Sad it was canceled
You just gave me really bad news, I had no idea :(
Sad it was canceled
You just gave me really bad news, I had no idea :(
That's the oldest trick in the book: appealing to nostalgia to sell more copies. Bethesda did it again!
Exactly. If games were released in a polished state, I'm sure more people would buy them at full price.
They swap a few pages, change some text here and there for the sake if it, and your old book isn't valid anymore.
I'm on desktop most of the time, I haven't tried blocking on mobile.
It seems to be working for me. I blocked that account, reloaded this thread and their comments had disappeared.
I discovered this channel the other day and I found it quite entertaining tbh, especially his Skyrim VR series.
Still how can you expect anyone to challenge the tip clubs if they're never allowed to spend that kind of money.
I think this is enforced to avoid City/Chelsea situations in La Liga.
Probably the only Silent Hill game that might need a remake is the first one, since it's so archaic technically.
You're right, I mixed dates and numbers. It was ~40% turnout, and then in 2019 a poll showed that ~40% of Catalans wanted independence. That's where I got my numbers wrong I think.
Maybe I didn't phrase it correctly, let me try again. Of all the people who voted, only a bit above 40% voted yes.
The European Media Freedom Act is meant to protect the press from government overreach. But behind closed doors, a group of EU member states are threatening to block the new law over their demands for a blank check to use spyware for the purposes of “national security”.
When Rosa Moussaoui found out her phone had been targeted by the infamous Pegasus spyware, she felt a sense of violence and intrusion. “It’s like being robbed or just finding that somebody has taken your possessions”, she said.
For Moussaoui, a journalist for French newspaper L’Humanité who investigates human rights abuses by the Moroccan government, the surveillance, though invisible and very hard to trace, created a tangible loss of trust by sources with whom “in most cases I’ve lost contact,” she told members of the European Parliament in March this year. While she continues to work as investigative journalist, being targeted by Pegasus has taken a toll. She felt more on edge during her work, and was worried about the people she spoke with.
But Moussaoui’s testimony, and that of other journalists from across Europe, seems to have done little to move the needle in convincing some EU players that journalists need more protection from abusive authorities.
Instead, EU countries are pushing to weaken rules meant to protect journalists from surveillance, a cross-border investigation shows.
Internal documents obtained by Investigate Europe, Disclose and Follow the Money show that a group of governments – those of France, Finland, Greece, Italy, Malta, Sweden and Cyprus – have threatened to block talks with the European Parliament in a bid to justify the use of spyware on their computers and phones if their security authorities declare this to be a measure to "safeguard national security".
The law aims to protect the independence of journalists from interference by governments and media owners – but now, countries and EU lawmakers are fighting over whether the regulation shall limit the use of spyware and other forms of surveillance by intelligence services.
"This is the most difficult part of the fight for this legislative text," said Ramona Strugariu, a lawmaker from the liberal Renew Group and co-lead lawmaker for the European Media Freedom Act (EMFA). After 15 months of negotiations between the member states in the Council of the EU, the European Commission, and the Parliament, the institutions must now agree on a joint text in the so-called trilogue negotiations.