Does that last bit about "any civil money penalty" mean you can pay your fines with your own meme coin at face value, without having to sell them and thereby tank the value?
Note that she left the Left Party in 1992, and instead joined the Social Democrats. So she's been a member of the national parliament as a representative of the Social Democrats.
This is relevant as the Social Democrats are pro chat control, while the Left Party is against chat control.
Note that in 2013 there weren't many streaming services available in the polled countries. Netflix first appeared in UK and Sweden by 2012, and was probably not available at all in the other polled countries. So it's more likely that TV show prices refer to cable TV, not streaming.
Improved privacy without bad UX is super simple: Have privacy by default, and don't use personal information for things which the user hasn't asked for.
But the metrics/tracking crowd - especially the ad vendors - hate that, and they are more important to most companies/websites than the users.
(It also limits what methods you can use for site improvement, so it's a bit inconvenient for you too.)
Yes and no. The main aspect is that ethereum mining is much bigger than all alternative GPU-mineable coins. When I checked it using whattomine back in January, ethereum mining was roughly 16 times bigger than all others combined.
Since the number of coins mined is fixed regardless of the effort expended, the revenue per card would tank if every ethereum miner switched to other coins.
The relevant part is this "LAS gäller för alla arbetstagare med undantag för de i företagsledande ställning. Lagen är tvingande, men kan inskränkas genom kollektivavtalsskrivelser."
The law covers all employers and employees regardless of union membership, but agreements between unions and employer organizations can limit the scope.
As you say, in practice companies will often sweeten the deal with a big severance package if they want to make changes which the law doesn't allow. I.e. get the right people to voluntarily resign instead of having the wrong people being laid off.
Turris Omnia ( https://www.turris.com/en/omnia/overview/ ) kind of fits your bill, but it's more 2020 than 2022. The main downside is that it doesn't support WiFi6, so you're stuck with 3x3 MIMO 802.11ac.
It runs a modified OpenWrt, TurrisOS, which is open source.
They're a bit on the pricey side, so "worth buying" from that perspective will be up to you.
As others have said, those other coins will get increased competition splitting the mining returns. Unfortunately (for the miners), Ethereum is vastly bigger than all the other coins.
I checked whattomine a few days ago and compared the hash rates of each coin. To make it simpler to compare, I converted it into RTX3080 equivalents. With this measure the hash rate for Ethereum was equivalent to mining with a bit shy of 10 million RTX3080s.
Ethereum Classic, which is the second biggest coin listed on whattomine, had a hash rate equivalent to about 263000 RTX3080s. I.e. Ethereum has 37 times more miners than Classic, and if they all moved to Classic the revenue would be slashed to 1/38 of what it is now while everybody would incur the same costs as now.
Ravencoin is the second biggest mineable coin (Monero isn't profitable to mine even now, so it does not matter) and Ethereum is 83 times bigger than Ravencoin.
It turns out Ethereum is more than 16 times bigger than every other coin listed on whattomine combined.
In everything except the most exceptional circumstances knowing what to build will be a blend of written requirements and shared knowledge within the team. You can advocate for comprehensive requirements which pushes the effort towards the written spec side, or you can advocate for "working software over comprehensive documentation" which pushes the effort towards using more shared knowledge. Depending on the nature of your project, one or the other might be preferable.
For most projects, both "knowing what to build" and "working software" will never be 100% clear.