BambiDiego

joined 2 years ago
[–] BambiDiego@lemmy.world 4 points 23 hours ago

I don't like onions, but I could pick around them.

[–] BambiDiego@lemmy.world 12 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

It could be counted as IP infringement, corporate espionage, copyright infringement, trademark infringement, trademark abuse, and I'm sure various other things an actual lawyer would know.

I hate large companies and corporations, I think Nintendo is extremely horrible with a lot of their practices, especially regarding abandonware, archiving, and emulation, but when someone commits various crimes, especially unapologetically and without a just cause, they're still a criminal.

This is a case of a selfish prick of a man being a criminal against a selfish prick of a company.

Edit: oh and of course, piracy. (Sail the seas fellas, just not in plain view)

[–] BambiDiego@lemmy.world 3 points 3 weeks ago

Honestly, in legal paperwork, consult the laws.

In everyday conversation, it's what you feel.

I was born in South America, moved to the US when I was a child. I'm an adult now, my main language is English, I think in English, I grew up here, I have a life here.

If someone asked "what" I am, I say "I'm american, but I was born in South America." It can be either a fun conversation, or a filter for judgy people I don't want around me.

If I moved to Germany, I would still say I'm an American, because it's the culture I know, the place I grew up, the identity I choose.

I don't deny my heritage, I still enjoy Salteñas once a month with my family, I speak Spanish to my son to make sure he doesn't forget it, I look Hispanic, I still have fond memories of being a child in another country, but I never say I'm "Bolivian-American," because by circumstances of life I just have more identity of my life, here.