My guess is they live in the US and they're making their argument under the assumption that the treatment will be enormously expensive and you will have to pay out of pocket for it. In that case you're caught between a rock and a hard place: will I die a slow and painful death due to genetical disease X, or do I go bankrupt paying for it.
In many countries this is a genuine concern I guess. Even in multiple European countries with great healthcare and (nearly) free health insurance, "novel" (and often very expensive) treatments are not always covered.
> Really shows how ill the "App Store" model is when a company like Nintendo who has an entire hardware empire off selling high quality non-exploitative games can't make money on it without resorting to gambling industry tactics like the other low quality apps/games on there.
Or they're just greedy. They make tons of money running their own walled gardens.
Emby, a (somewhat) open source C# project, is not a fork of Plex Media Server, a closed source C/C++ project. Emby was forked as Jellyfin however, as a reaction to Emby becoming more and more of a closed source project.
No they shouldn't, because such laws will just open the door to even more abuse. Imagine you are raped by someone. You go to the police to report the crime, but unfortunately, they deny, and you can't provide any real evidence. They can now countersue because you've made a "false allegation" which ruined their life.
True, although if you are lucky your cables run through cable ducts. My house was built in 1935 and has brick walls as well, but all cables run through plastic cable ducts embedded in the walls. Where I'm from this is very common, as virtually all housing has brick (or concrete) walls.
If you do already have telephone and/or coax cabling in your home, it might be easier in the long run to just replace it to be honest. Ethernet sockets and cables are cheap, and don't consume power.
I was looking into MOCA, but eventually I decided against it due to pricing and latency concerns. In the end, I opened up the coax socket at my router, tied an ethernet cable to the coax cable, went to my office (room above the room where the router is), opened up the coax socket, pulled out the coax cable, and voila, I now had an ethernet cable in the duct.
Using both Windows and macOS I feel that Windows has only recently started to catch up with Finder.