If you don't pay for WinRAR, the only thing it will do is show up notices to buy it. This is intentional, meant to prevent piracy. So it's more like a donation rather than a purchase.
Lately, I've been seeing a lot of trucks in my country have a "dead angles" sticker that shows something similar.
This just goes to show you that Google will do anything for money.
The API pricing was imposed to crack down on free training of LLMs with user data.
There were also other API changes like totally removing access to content marked as mature. I don't know if subreddits can disable setting a post as mature because automods can't detect it or see its content.
Pokémon FireRed
Seems really scary against the Internet as we know it. Saying that also because the word "kosa" means "scythe" in my language.
Unfortunately, only Europe. Because manufacturers still want to capitalize on those "not easily removable" batteries in the rest of the world.
I was actually hesitant at first, because I didn't know of a good alternative. Then, there's Lemmy that I've heard of. Since lemmy.world has been compromised, I chose this server. I still haven't escaped Reddit fully. However, the fact the board at Reddit Inc. accepted and implemented the new API pricing made my decision to come to Lemmy quicker.
I'm pretty sure that, under the hood, they become evil towards their users and don't change from that. And will never reconsider rescinding the things we're grateful to not have in the fediverse: profits fueled by advertising rather than donations, tracking sensitive information (including that one can and will use against you), selling that information, and obscure, closed algorithms.
But what you said may be right. Those goddamn C&D orders backed by powerful lawyers...
I do think bots can be a great thing for Lemmy instance moderation, and there's a list of libraries one can use: https://github.com/dbeley/awesome-lemmy#libraries (the link in the Lemmy docs is outdated).
Same here! Though my Reddit escape is going to be slow, it's sure.
I do not understand why would a developer (or development team) change the licensing terms of their software for something stricter, like Redis did. Could someone tell me what the factors are?