The doctor can wave any/all that insurance doesn’t cover. And/Or offer a payment plan.
The doctor can wave any/all that insurance doesn’t cover. And/Or offer a payment plan.
Jerboa was doing fine for me until Jerboa got updated beyond the Lemmy instances I’ve been browsing (which aren’t updating because the new Lemmy release removes the captcha, which then prevents new sign ups). Now Jerboa says the biggest Lemmy instance is below the minimum version Jerboa supports, and refuses to open the instance. Helluva bump in the road…
There are 18 states that have followed suit, providing for deletion requests. The latest being Tennessee, which goes into affect July 1.
The following is from Data Guidance
On 11 May 2023, the Tennessee Governor signed the TIPA into law, which shall enter into force on 1 July 2025. The TIPA sets out obligations for businesses covered by its scope, such as risk assessments, data minimisation requirements, and obtaining opt-in consent for processing sensitive personal information, and establishes consumer rights, including the right to know, access, correction, deletion, and data portability, as well as a right to opt out of the sale of personal information, targeted advertising, and profiling.
As a Linux home user that uses windows for work, I recommend you start by debloating your windows. I prefer the Powershell script found here. There are multiple options for debloating windows on github, some also include tools to disable telemetry. I prefer more control over what telemetry gets disabled, and use O&O Shutup to manage that separately.
Then install a few Linux distros in a free hypervisor (Hyper-V/VirtualBox/VMware Player) on your lean windows. Note, Hyper-V is only avaliable on Pro versions of windows. Experiment until you find a Linux distro you are comfortable with. Build your confidence before you take that jump, and you’ll be more likely to stick with it.
If you still find you may occasionally need windows, you can always dual boot, or run windows inside a hypervisor on Linux.
There are 18 states now that have data protection laws modeled after NIST that include allowances for data deletion requests.
I think those are called death throes.