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Comment They're not just blocking (Score 1) 13

They're also putting news stories out that users of these so-called "dodgy boxes" are putting themselves at risk of having their bank details stolen. Legality aside this really does stink of desperation.

It's not just Amazon though. Most of the people I know with these things have the app installed on Nvidia shields and they're not using them to watch Prime content; mostly they have them to avoid the massive costs that Sky charge for sports coverage. The article linked above tries to downplay the savings as only about £13 a month. Sky TV alone can cost four times that for the Sports+Movie package.

Comment Re:Other developers.... (Score 2) 13

Would the $20 ONN sticks from Walmart work better for you?

I have an puck-style device of theirs which is just an Amtel SoC with GoogleTV Android on it. Probably doesn't get updates but then you don't let them have unfettered access to the Internet either.

I've sideloaded Jellyfin, SmarTube-Next, etc.

I used to have a half dozen Fire sticks and have removed all but one, in a kid's bedroom. They haven't banned Jellyfin ... yet... but aren't they dropping Android as well?

Comment Re:Should not require an app (Score 2) 74

Google Play lists all the permissions:

Device & app history
        retrieve running apps

Location
        approximate location (network-based)
        precise location (GPS and network-based)

Phone
        read phone status and identity

Photos / Media / Files
        read the contents of your USB storage
        modify or delete the contents of your USB storage

Storage
        read the contents of your USB storage
        modify or delete the contents of your USB storage

Camera
        take pictures and videos

Wi-Fi connection information
        view Wi-Fi connections

Device ID & call information
        read phone status and identity

Other
        receive data from Internet
        view network connections
        pair with Bluetooth devices
        access Bluetooth settings
        connect and disconnect from Wi-Fi
        full network access
        control Near-Field Communication
        run at startup
        reorder running apps
        control vibration
        prevent device from sleeping
        read Google service configuration

You can refuse some of those permissions, but it's still a hell of a lot.

Comment Re:It's not going to crash (Score 1) 138

Stupid fucking racism. I live in the UK, you idiot, because not every critic of the US government is automatically a member of the CCP, despite your fevered little defensive wank-fantasies to the contrary.

The worst part about you idiot racists, apart from the pusillanimity, is your unmatched lack of intellect, as evidenced by this post of yours.

Comment Re: the world should reward them (Score 1) 162

That's the key point that people always forget, or simply don't know. Most Chinese people are happy with how things are going. Life is getting better every year. They feel like they are involved in local decisions, and that the government is looking out for them.

I asked a guy about all the CCTV cameras on roads. I noticed them because, unlike the ones in the UK that are hidden and quietly record number plates in a central police database all over the country, the ones in China have a flash so you can't miss them. As well as the licence plate, they get a photo of the driver, hence the need for the flash. I was a bit alarmed, but he said they keep everyone safe and help the police catch criminals. Exactly the same justification used in the UK, only with better PR.

Comment Re:It's not going to crash (Score 1) 138

First, the US government has bailed out the US auto industry repeatedly:
1. 1979, Chrysler bailout, 1.5bn, plus looser credit and trade protections that benefited Ford in particular and helped it avoid formal insolvency
2. 2008/9, GM & Chrysler bailouts, 60bn+, plus regulatory flexibility, Fed credit facilities, and supplier rescue programs that benefited Ford in particular
3. 2020, credit and payroll support, 10s bns+, plus Fed corporate-bond purchasing programs, which kept credit markets open (Ford raised $8 billion through bond sales in April 2020 thanks to that liquidity), payroll tax deferrals, and supplier support programs

Second, I’m not trying to claim the US government *controls* the US auto industry, I’m saying that the US auto industry has been *more dependent* on the US government for bailouts than the Chinese auto industry has been on the Chinese government. These are not equivalent statements, and you’ve just chosen the most fuckwitted interpretation you possibly could, of what I said, to make yourself feel better, instead of engaging with what I said substantively

Third, You’ve actually built not one, but *two* strawmen into that oil wars point.

Firstly, I didn’t say *only* U.S.-made cars used oil. My point was that U.S. geopolitical and military actions to secure Gulf oil flows directly supported the petroleum-based economy as a whole, in which the American auto industry was a core pillar. Keeping global oil plentiful and cheap has been a recurring strategic objective since at least the 1980 Carter Doctrine, which *explicitly stated* that the U.S. would use force if necessary to protect Persian Gulf energy supplies. That policy underpinned decades of intervention, including the 1987 Operation Earnest Will (reflagging Kuwaiti tankers) and the 1991 Gulf War, both designed to ensure oil supply stability.

Secondly, I never said the Gulf War was *only* about oil. Wars are always multi-causal: regional stability, alliances, deterrence, and economic interests. But to deny that oil was a central factor in the Gulf War is to ignore the historical record: policymakers and analysts at the time openly cited the need to protect energy markets and the “free flow of oil at reasonable prices” as a national security priority.

The point stands: the U.S. has repeatedly used military force to secure oil supplies that sustain its economic model — a model built around cheap energy and high automobile dependence. Recognising that link isn’t reductionist; it’s just historically accurate. If you want to challenge it, you’ll need to address the evidence rather than arguments I didn’t actually make.

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