Companies could potentially switch to off shoring the jobs whether the government does everything, nothing, or any point in between.
The only way to prevent that is to make labour and production as cheap, disposable, exploitable and polluting everywhere as it is in the worst country in the world.
Do you want to keep arguing the point, or just shush up now?
what was the question?
"Did Jesus have feathers?"
we want to allow you to download any of our outdated examples of complete DRM-ridden shit from our online catalog
Nothing in this non-binding non-guarantee commits to offering customers a choice at all, whether it's from the whole catalog or the dog eared and about-to-be-shitcanned section of it.
If you're inferring otherwise, well... it's EA. This is from the same... person... who claimed that the always-on aspect is all about gameplay, rather than being driven by EA's unslakable urge to kill off re-sales and older games. You can tell that she's lying because her fingers are moving.
And yet for all your zeal in explaining why we should be angry and miserable, Steam users are generally very happy with the experience and keep voluntarily coming back for more.
These rights that you think you have are a relic. If you want to buy something for resale, I suggest a buggy whip.
Say, after giving them £40 for Battlefield 3, did you then give them another £10 to file a Subject Access Request?
They must be weeping into their giant pile of money.
Waste not, get your budget cut next year.