luckily those are their internal rules and now international laws that can't be broken.
THere's literally 0 reason they can't just go "well, this tld is too big. it's generic now"
luckily those are their internal rules and now international laws that can't be broken.
THere's literally 0 reason they can't just go "well, this tld is too big. it's generic now"
while funny, it would cause me so many headaches either directly or indirectly that is completely cancels out
also germany, actually
ah, I love it when mothers teach their kids valuable skills
I think it was a 4-pack
It never went away. I have a duracell battery with power check sitting next to me on my desk
only if you can find some weird magnetic anomaly and plane crash survivors
Rule #1 about going to court ~~against a large company with good lawyers~~: don’t represent yourself, ~~since there’s no way you’ll win, and the judgment will likely require you to cover at least some of Nintendo’s legal fees.~~
At that time, Daly agreed "both verbally and in signed writing" to refrain from these infringing sales, according to Nintendo. It was only after months of Daly continuing those sales and largely ignoring further contact from Nintendo that the company says it was forced to file its June lawsuit in a Seattle federal court.
if that's the case, I can't see it going well for him...
Heck, he'd probably have been fine if he just stopped selling cards with roms preinstalled, but kept the normal modding stuff up
controlled by a modded switch
R