> That is not always true, it really does depend on the crime. Jury Nullification does still exist and is becoming more popular especially for things like Drug Laws. How is that a counter-example to the guideline "if…
Does the company not have any legal recourse against people going public (or threatening to go public) with a bug like this before it's fixed? If not, how is it that United can just mark unfixed bugs "as duplicates" and…
> That is not always true, it really does depend on the crime. Jury Nullification does still exist and is becoming more popular especially for things like Drug Laws. How is that a counter-example to the guideline "if…
Does the company not have any legal recourse against people going public (or threatening to go public) with a bug like this before it's fixed? If not, how is it that United can just mark unfixed bugs "as duplicates" and…