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Code that is written will have to maintained often by someone else than who wrote the code. So if one write code nobody else understands its an eventual maintenence failure.

You could optimize for different things. Code understandability by the team, speed, technical brilliance.

If you optimize for technical brilliance but nobody else on the team understands the code its still a failure.

Seen over engineered code


Big corp penny slap on the fingers. I dont this amount will change behaviour or incentive to make larger profit.

It sets precedent, and has already led to a (by Chinese foreign policy standards) fairly vicious response [0][1][2].

This is also part of the EU's larger tariffs against China [3].

[0] - https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202605/1361926.shtml

[1] - https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202605/1362200.shtml

[2] - https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202605/1362161.shtml

[3] - https://www.ft.com/content/e28fe696-ac30-4543-a105-febc82789...


> [0]

Ahah, China going Adam Smith on the EU.

Peacefully, so far. Let's hope they don't go "opium war" on free trade.



> while French President Emmanuel Macron even suggested following US-style measures akin to the "Section 301" tariffs.

> A major source of this latest wave of the so-called "China shock" narrative is the claim that the EU's trade deficit with China reached 360 billion euros in 2025.

These are the same people whose collective knickers are getting in a twist over Trump, mind you.


The theory is that this won't be the only fine if Temu doesn't fix this. So yes, a slap on the fingers, but the fines should grow bigger if Temu doesn't address this.

I don't understand how €200M can ever be considered a "penny slap".

€200M accounts for roughly 1.6% of their €12.3B net profit in 2025.

The average EU salary is €39,808. It's equivalent to a €636 fine. Though this is based on income, not net profit so it's actually more impactful to the average person than to Temu.


Most people would find being fined a week's wages significant. It's not what they'd expect to get for, say, murder, but worse than any parking fine and enough that they'd give serious consideration to not doing whatever they did again.

Depends how much you made doing the activity you got fined for. Temu says the fine is disproportionate (of course) but I'd be surprised if they made actually less than 200M selling such goods over the years. Ideally it should be several multiples of what was truly made, otherwise it's just a bet you might not get caught or, in the worst case, a loan until you are fined.

Temu profit in 2025 from EU was $120M, you should count profit from EU, not global.

https://themorningnews.com/news/2025/10/13/temu-doubles-eu-p...


Sure but this €200m fine is just the first fine. Its the first hit of the stick. It isn't meant to be crippling - it's just mean to be serious enough that they take action to avoid future fines, which might be a lot bigger.

These sort of calculations are always missing a simple fact that no company on earth, not even Apple or Google shrugs off a 200M fine, no matter how little it is of their entire operating budget. It's the kind of money that gets people fired, even if it made no difference to the bottom line.

> It's the kind of money that gets people fired

1. It's not, and

2. Who cares if somebody gets fired for PR purposes? Especially with a severance that will make sure that their great-grandchildren will never have to work and your great-grandchildren will be paying them rent?

Everybody doing tens of billions of $ of business shrugs off a $200M fine. They might even get a bonus and a plaque for coming up with a scam that lasted so long before it blew up.


>>Everybody doing tens of billions of $ of business shrugs off a $200M fine

Again, that's not how it works, although I know people have this romanticized view of big companies casually shrugging off 200M fines like nothing.

>>They might even get a bonus and a plaque for coming up with a scam that lasted so long before it blew up.

Again, cool idea for a book, but doesn't happen in reality. No one gets a pat on the back and a bonus for being fined 200M.


A real slap on the wrist of the CEO by a wronged customer would leave a more lasting impression.

[flagged]


Quick, reinterpret with your own faculties! (Model output got itself banned here) - friendly message :)

The fine is for activity in the EU, so compare it to their business there. Comparing apples to advertisement fliers is useful only if you are using the fliers as toilet paper substitutes.

Actually with data fusion VPN does not fix privacy. Ad networks does data fusion of Javascript browser finger print. So you are de cloaked any way on a VPN


You absolutely should not be using the same browser for general browsing and VPN based browsing. Check out Mullvad Browser, based on Tor Browser but without Tor.


most vpns block ads


not if the fingerprint code is coming from the first party server which is the case for most modern malware.


Use Winpodx and run Windows apps as a container in Linux

https://github.com/kernalix7/winpodx


But as soon as what happens is an unusual event that is not in training data it get dangerous.

Think of any abnormal weather events that would make news headlines such as Lightning, blizzard, snow storms etc

This need to be simulated

Or the litmus test would the developers ride in such a product at such an event?


Sounds useful for display purposes


How does it compare to drbd?

"Distributed Replicated Block Device (DRBD)[3] is a distributed replicated storage system for the Linux platform. It mirrors block devices between multiple hosts"

Which I think may be technology used by clouds


Go Linux. Gamers will have a better experiance in Linux. Predict that Windows will become an legacy emulation layer.


The problem is when people wear "smart" aka dumb privacy glasses in public restrooms. Should be banned or geofenced


Will wired speakers make a come back? Stereo separation vs mono pods?


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