It's the first one I've paid for. And it is that much better than the free ones I used before imho.
hannesh93
If it's free then you're the product
And if you're the product then there's an interest to keep you on the site and show you ads which works best if the first result isn't the correct one and you need to scroll or even go to page two
It's literally the reason why Google got so much worse that they wanted to show more ads to users which wouldn't work if the best result is always the first
You can create a search-link that includes your token so you can also use it in incognito or if you are logged out for some reason.
I'm very happy with kagi at the moment. Just crossed one year using it as my main search engine last week and don't see why I would go back.
From my point of view both the police and the judges are getting heavily influenced by people with a less democratic agenda in mind.
Something like that would've never worked years ago - but with 4 more years of Trump handpicking judges? I wouldn't even be sure the Supreme Court would strike something lime that down if it's done subtle enough.
There is one argument against everyone voting by mail that I accept:
People could be making "let's go vote together"-meetups to make sure their friends are voting what they "should" - which would destroy freedom and privacy of the vote which are fundamental.
The same can also happen in abusive relationships where one partner can take away the freedom to vote what they want from the other by standing behind them when they fill out their ballot.
Voting by mail is safe, but because of those two it should NEVER be the de-facto standard. It's great to have more people voting - but whoever can should still vote personally if possible.
I know the setup of the voting booths is way worse in the US than here in Germany so both the way to them and the lines in front of them are longer, so that decision might flip towards voting by mail quicker, but imho voting in person should remain the standard - just because noone can look over your shoulder when you're making your cross in that setting
I just saw the Uber case and realized that this in definitely way differently in the US. I was not aware that completely getting around the law was such a common practice. I thought that Disney thing was a rarity
Yeah - it's an art to find the perfect mix between "sounds complicated enough that they zone out", "sounds like stuff gets done" and "not making people ask if you need help with that".
How often are you reading about someone suing and then that lawsuit (which is already in court) being dropped because they got a better offer for an arbitration/settlement out of court? For me that's a very common thing to read for bigger cases.
But I agree that forced arbitration with not even a chance to take it to court if you don't like the offer is horrible for the consumer
Arbitration doesn’t save money. You still need lawyers.
of course - but usually it's way faster than getting a proper court-ruling - and since lawyers are paid per hour that makes a big difference
Isn't it often in both parties to settle things out of court? For the one that'd sue it's usually more money at less cost and the company gets around possibly having a bad precedent set and the bad publicity to potentially losing in court.
This is probably aimed at people creating issues in the hopes of getting a settlement for something that has a slim (but Nonzero) chance to hold up in court.
It's a company - I think this aims at people only bringing serious claims and reducing the paperwork for them - but since it's Valve people will glorify everything they do
Buzzkill! Perfect to remove distracting notifications during work hours or to not see some notifications altogether