Over 300,000 people die of drowning each year. In order to protect society, it is now illegal to consume or possess water.
Your government is also considering banning solid food, as it presents a needless choking hazard.
You are not an adult.
You are a baby.
Eat the baby food.
Over 300,000 people die of drowning each year. In order to protect society, it is now illegal to consume or possess water.
Your government is also considering banning solid food, as it presents a needless choking hazard.
You are not an adult.
You are a baby.
Eat the baby food.
Compare this to Google, when the Pixel 6a had battery flaws, they offered free replacements, cash payouts, or credits even for out of warranty devices. But, a "hype" brand expects users to pay 70% of the original cost to "fix" a hardware failure. C'mon man. @getpeid
As the image shows, the right earbud's battery fails to keep up which was a widespread issue with either earbuds (varies by person) which I suspect started happening after an update. It's an expensive e-waste now.
I'm Highly disappointed with @Nothing. My ₹11k Ear (2024) developed severe battery issues in just 7 months, a known community defect. Because I couldn’t travel 4 hours to a service center immediately, they now refuse a repair & demand ₹8k for a "discounted" replacement.
People of vizag - andhra, please start opposing data centres in vizag. We do not get proper water to drink. We all should again rely on paying to drink water, most basic water. We will be in corporate loop hole.
“They reported me to the STATE for selling pickles and green beans.”
“The government says I CANT sell food grown on my OWN land.”
Yet the same system that bans farm-fresh jars has no problem APPROVING shelves full of pesticide-treated, chemically processed junk.
Did you know you can oppose government censorship without supporting the content?
You can think something is awful, refuse to engage with it, and still not want the government deciding what gets removed.
Because the moment we justify censorship based on “I don’t like this,” we hand that same power to someone else, who might decide your work crosses the line.
That’s how that works.
France had an anti-piracy system called HADOPI to stop people from illegally downloading movies and music, but on April 30, 2026, France’s highest court ruled that the main part of this system is illegal.
It broke European rules on privacy and human rights.
The system sent warnings to internet users suspected of sharing files, and the court said it did not protect people’s private information well enough.
The new agency, called Arcom, can still block big pirate websites, but the warnings and fines for ordinary people are mostly finished.
This is a big win for groups that defend digital rights after 17 years of work.