I guess you wouldn't, you'd have a sort function afterwards. ...for Unix' insistence on composability, the shell tools are often unnecessarily monolithic, probably because that's the only sane way if the only type you…
It's not nearly as bad as it was when payout was still strictly by production. Nowadays, farmers are paid to let fields fall fallow so there's no insane overproduction, hence less market crashing abroad. Some sort of…
> How could have anybody been so stupid? We are talking about the people publishing "Bild", here. It's not actually about being stupid, it's about being blinded by their own evilness. Would you expect anything different…
> On the other hand, I wonder whether the German Pirate Party is able to look beyond what may be construed as an interest of German publishing industry. It's not actually in that industry's interest and even if in were,…
Oh, I'm sure the guy could cope with the world changing. But can his future boss? You're acting as if that were in his control.
The original case was a 16-year old newspaper article about a bankruptcy (but no fraud or such) that showed up as first result on a google search for a Spaniard's name, which impacted his employment prospects and such.…
The European Courts aren't really a higher courts than the national high courts, just ask the German one. Which, yes, does include academics and even civil servants with extensive background in law. And unlike say in…
Datensparsamkeit under "assess"? As in "Let's assess whether we'd like to follow the law"?
Yes, it might be topical, and I have a strong inkling that says that it's a case google shouldn't have accepted. They seem to be taking more down than is required of them. But it's also a far cry from "banker censors…
The article wasn't censored, it just doesn't show up any more when you search for the name of the commenter. It still shows up when you search for the name of the banker that was the subject of the article, the name of…
So you'd rather trust someone who rubber-stamped traffic infractions at a low-level court for 20 years than a professor of law to decide on highly abstract and generic cases? Non-judges are a rather common thing among…
I guess you wouldn't, you'd have a sort function afterwards. ...for Unix' insistence on composability, the shell tools are often unnecessarily monolithic, probably because that's the only sane way if the only type you…
It's not nearly as bad as it was when payout was still strictly by production. Nowadays, farmers are paid to let fields fall fallow so there's no insane overproduction, hence less market crashing abroad. Some sort of…
> How could have anybody been so stupid? We are talking about the people publishing "Bild", here. It's not actually about being stupid, it's about being blinded by their own evilness. Would you expect anything different…
> On the other hand, I wonder whether the German Pirate Party is able to look beyond what may be construed as an interest of German publishing industry. It's not actually in that industry's interest and even if in were,…
Oh, I'm sure the guy could cope with the world changing. But can his future boss? You're acting as if that were in his control.
The original case was a 16-year old newspaper article about a bankruptcy (but no fraud or such) that showed up as first result on a google search for a Spaniard's name, which impacted his employment prospects and such.…
The European Courts aren't really a higher courts than the national high courts, just ask the German one. Which, yes, does include academics and even civil servants with extensive background in law. And unlike say in…
Datensparsamkeit under "assess"? As in "Let's assess whether we'd like to follow the law"?
Yes, it might be topical, and I have a strong inkling that says that it's a case google shouldn't have accepted. They seem to be taking more down than is required of them. But it's also a far cry from "banker censors…
The article wasn't censored, it just doesn't show up any more when you search for the name of the commenter. It still shows up when you search for the name of the banker that was the subject of the article, the name of…
So you'd rather trust someone who rubber-stamped traffic infractions at a low-level court for 20 years than a professor of law to decide on highly abstract and generic cases? Non-judges are a rather common thing among…