One can hope that the store operators will also be heavily fined for their apparent failure to protect their customers' information from infosec threats. Show them teeth, GDPR.
agrammatic
Bei der FSFE müsste es aber mW allgemeiner gehalten werden, nicht nur auf die DB bezogen, weil die FSFE ja europäisch orientiert ist.
Finde ich auch so. Digitalzwang ist ein europaweites Problem. Z.B. nach der Einführung von Payment Services Directive2, kann man immer häufiger in der EU ohne Google- oder Apple-Services e-Banking nicht nutzen (viele Zwang-TAN-Apps sperren LineageOS u. a.).
Für D haben sich ja Kuketz und Digitalcourage dem Thema DB-App angenommen und Digitalcourage hat ja noch allgemeiner die “Digitalzwang”-Kampagnen, u.a. mit dem “Digitalzwangmelder” und speziell vs. die DB und die DHL.
Cool, ich kannte diese Typen nicht!
Zeit für eine neue Kampagne der FSFE?
Germany: shock
Cyprus: anger
None had any discourse around what the PISA scores measure and if there's any problematisation warranted around the methodology etc. So, in the end, it just serves as a regular outrage topic for the news cycle, but because no-one understands what the scores mean, no-one can do anything about them.
Massive parking lots at the edge of the city. At least this was the recommendation of the Berlin Autofrei initiative.
income-proportional fee structure for government services?
This is income tax.
And if the strike spreads to Germany, which it very well could, it could mean the cease of operation of the Model Y factory in Berlin, which would be devastating to them.
A big problem is that Germany's labour laws do not allow sympathy or political strikes. A strike can only be legally called in association with a collective bargaining agreement negotiation/dispute.
Germany will be the weak link in this cross-country wave of strikes.
For clarity, I'm in favour of changing the terminology to highlight the historical injustice.
I just thought it's important to admit that it's a recent change of linguistic preferences even in the most official Greek publications. Indeed, up to the last couple of years, the adjectival "Elgin" was used in Greek as an accusation of theft, not a recognition of ownership.
I wouldn't focus too much on that. I studied in a Greek-medium public school, and the sculptures were always referred to as "Elgin Marbles" in history textbooks produced by the Greek Ministry of Education. Same for journalism and public discourse in Greek.
Diligently correcting the term to "Parthenon sculptures" is a recent cause.
Yes, but in the absence of other factors, "cold tolerance" is something that can change by habituation.
This kind of makes me feel that the problem starts one layer before: this are is so spread out. It really doesn't look like there's any visible reason for buildings to be so far apart.
There's so few buildings that yeah, I think one bus stop is enough to serve them as far as amount of users is concerned. But the green could have been around the built up area, not between the buildings. Parking could also be compacted, maybe multi-floor or underground to reduce the surface area.