I’m rescheduling my marijuana to 4:20 to fuel the rise of dark brandon.
What law are they breaking? Not trying to defend Google or anything, just curious what law is blatantly being broken here because I don’t know of one
complaining shitposts are shit
Honestly not that ridiculous of a comparison considering California’s size and GDP, we could be doing a lot better
It depends, is your guitar plugged in to an amp loud enough that your neighbors can hear? If not, you do you lol. But you shouldn’t have to worry about your strings snapping as long as you don’t tune them higher than they’re intended to go, I would go ahead and tune them
I think they still can but they have less fine control over which ad placements they disable? I’m not totally sure, but that’s what this link seems to imply
support.google.com/youtube/answer/6332943?hl=en
Those YouTubers have the option to disable ads on their channel if that is truly all the revenue they need, you don’t need to make that decision for them
This wouldn’t be gross incompetence, it is a standard treatment that comes with pregnancy risks that the patient can choose to take knowing that they aren’t going to give birth. All of those quotes youve selectively pulled are in reference to unexpected injury that isn’t outlined in the waiver, so I’m pretty sure they wouldn’t apply in this case. Neither of us are lawyers though, I wonder if any lawyer fed heads could chime in
Yes they do. In new york (where this took place), and most places, doctors are protected by liability waivers if the patient has informed consent. Read this for more information if you want an actual informed opinion on this
sobolaw.com/…/signing-a-waiver-before-surgery-can…

Signing a Waiver Before Surgery: Can You Still Sue? | Medical Malpractice
You can still sue for medical malpractice even if you signed a waiver before your surgery. Learn how to gain compensation for your injuries.
Sobo & SoboNice imaginary conversation, I’m sure you’re a totally qualified doctor and lawyer… just have the patient sign a liability waiver dude