Conversation

Replying to
That's one form of DRM. It's not the entire picture. Software trying to enforce restrictions on usage and trying to prevent it from being bypassed is what myself and many others refer to as DRM and it includes anti-fraud and anti-cheat mechanisms. To me, that's what it means.
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Replying to and
You're trying to police how myself and many others commonly use the language and the way that I've always chosen to use Twitter of sending multiple tweets, each with a separate thought just like writing a commit message. It's how I use it and will continue to use it indefinitely.
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Replying to
No, Twitter polices by banning selectively. They're the cops. You and I are fellow citizens. I'm just replying to you. Mute me if you must; I'm sorely tempted to mute you. You have not corrected or retracted any of your errors ("enforced viewing", "the site with different ads").
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Replying to
Those aren't errors. You're trying to spin things to make those distinctions, when in reality someone neutral is far more likely to agree with my interpretation rather than the corporate spin.
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Replying to
No, you wrote those words, and they are false. Don't try to evade now by arguing unspecified "distinctions". What "enforced viewing"? Ads are opt in. What "the site with different ads"? We do not replace ads in pages. You're in a hole. Stop digging!
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Replying to
You're projecting exactly what you're doing onto me as if I'm the one doing it. It's ridiculous. It's you being incredibly dishonest, misleading and going out of the way to spin things. You're increasingly making the case that you're a nasty person and Brave is a nasty company.
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Replying to
I'm citing your words and refuting them. You are not responding directly, rather misdirecting to "tu quoque" at worse, or vague "distinctions" you have you to state at best. Do better.
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