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Spoof the user agent. I'd bet the vast majority of "only works on XYZ browser" websites will still work.
Palantir is a glorified IT consulting company. You tell them "I want a system to manage patient records" and they will dispatch a team of engineers fresh out of college to build it for you while charging top dollar. They are able to get government & military contracts because of lobbying and influence, but generally everything you see about them online is marketing.
The app isn’t shutting down today, so they may have decided that the write up is still useful.
Took a full 8 years for a Microsoft acquisition to go to shit, which is probably a record. Kudos to the Github team for holding out this long.
It is incredibly easy now to get an idea to the prototype stage, but making it production-ready still needs boring old software engineering skills. I know countless people who followed the "I'll vibe code my own business" trend, and a few of them did get pretty far, but ultimately not a single one actually launched. Anyone who has been doing this professionally will tell you that the "last step" is what takes the majority of time and effort.

Serious question, but not entirely related to the topic - how are “smart” people in the US preparing for the next 20-30 years?

- Assume everything will be fine and America will remain a global economic superpower.

- Plan an exit to a more serious, stable country.

- Some option in the middle of the two to hedge your bets?

Is an aircraft carrier's location supposed to be secret? Pretty hard to hide from a satellite I'd imagine.

A big problem now both internally to a company and externally is that official support channels are being replaced by chatbots, and you really have no option but to trust their output because a human expert is simply no longer available.

If I post a question to the internal payment team's forum about a critical processing issue and some "payments bot" replies to me, should I be at fault for trusting the answer?

I'm sure I'm missing some context here but what is Atari's role here exactly? Isn't OpenTTD an independent and fully legal project? What is Atari's basis for asking for a "compromise"?

Or is it just the case that the project maintainers got paid off?

You need an annual income of $200K to become an accredited investor. If you don't have that, you anyways shouldn't be participating in risky private markets.

If anything they should also restrict options trading, sports gambling, prediction markets etc. to accredited investors.