I can't think of a reason why it wouldn't be completely legal? Unless there's some sort of ToS violation, however it'd be interesting to see how that would stand up to legal scrutiny. There are however clear ethical…
Nobody is going to simply stumble across your application, so it's your job to start promoting it! That doesn't mean paying for advertising, but marketing doesn't always cost money. If you're keen to have more people…
I'm curious to know what the attack vector was to hijack Craigslist; and of course if the affiliate link will credit the attackers with funding if they discover their visitors were fraudulent.
I guess you could call it dual-primary - I'm quite evenly split between Fedora and Windows. I like Fedora because my work runs RHEL on its VMs and it is easy to have the two set up similarly. I like the package manager…
I can't think of a reason why it wouldn't be completely legal? Unless there's some sort of ToS violation, however it'd be interesting to see how that would stand up to legal scrutiny. There are however clear ethical…
Nobody is going to simply stumble across your application, so it's your job to start promoting it! That doesn't mean paying for advertising, but marketing doesn't always cost money. If you're keen to have more people…
I'm curious to know what the attack vector was to hijack Craigslist; and of course if the affiliate link will credit the attackers with funding if they discover their visitors were fraudulent.
I guess you could call it dual-primary - I'm quite evenly split between Fedora and Windows. I like Fedora because my work runs RHEL on its VMs and it is easy to have the two set up similarly. I like the package manager…