Mozilla had the same problem with h.264 until Cisco allowed them to use openh264 and ate any associated licensing costs. Just from a cursory glance, HEVC licensing seems much more of a clusterfuck.
Nothing, I think the issue is that the other 50% will be peroxide cured because it's cheaper, though more likely to have fillers and potentially cause skin irritation or allergies.
Upgrayedd gonna get his latinum.
On the flip side, if the agencies' interpretation is pants-on-head crazy it also stands under Chevron but shouldn't under a fair examination by a court.
If it actually gets passed, I think it has a good chance of holding up. The big problem with Chevron deference, despite its convenience, is that the Administrative Procedures Act says that courts are supposed to do the exact opposite.
They weren't paying attention. The conservative legal sphere had been dreaming of ending Chevron deference for a long time, and the conservative SCOTUS justices have been signaling it as well.
With whom did CNET maintain a top tier reputation until 2020? It's been a shell of itself for well over a decade at this point. That they've gone to full throated AI content seems to me the corpse standing up and shuffling around as a zombie.
And then in 5 years they'll all settle for a few million dollars in a class action for price fixing. Rinse, repeat.
Well, Mr Christie, Trump is a symptom of the kind of party you've been a part of for decades. These people and their anger against the truth are the culmination of everything your party stands for.
No part of the Constitution gives the Supreme Court the power of judicial review either. The court created that power out of nothing. If you wanna get pissy, Alito.
In addition to a lot of the default/optional lists built-in to uBO, I've found the Bypass Paywalls Clean filter to really help get rid of crappy paywalls, even without the accompanying userscript.
https://github.com/bpc-clone/bypass-paywalls-clean-filters