Bin zwar nicht der Originalposter, hätte aber https://www.dwd.de/DE/leistungen/_config/leistungsteckbriefPublication.pdf?view=nasPublication&imageFilePath=12457998846040538266923503217546217740945044365452315531878965869354799583730014208313556886851581304435167075435902474522293820556788155046949847319924488503535140554578442479455774883276224364730830036670537891237508202786597280079524278375595464423260142208134840387684799613567248928339053198653&download=true anzubieten.
marshell
joined 1 year ago
Exactly what I felt, too!!!
I personally liked the PAI approach from the Mi Band where you get points for various activities, depending on the heart rate during the activity. You loose the points after a week - motivating you to continue and also the points are harder to get the better you get at the activity, because of the lower heart rate. I know, it's all smoke and mirrors, but I I liked that approach for the same reasons you mentioned.
Erfahrungen nicht, aber die Verbraucherzentralen haben Mustertexte. Könnte man einfach mal drauf ankommen lassen. https://www.verbraucherzentrale.de/musterbriefe/digitale-welt/datenschutz-35853
I don't know the details or have any more information, but there is a background as to reporting suicides in Germany.
Usually, it is consensus between the German news outlets not to report suicides, unless it has been committed by a person of interest, usually a celebrity. This is not a law or otherwise enforced, but a common understanding of the outlets amongst each other, so there will be no promotion of suicide. Here is a source (in German, unfortunately, explaining the reasoning: https://www.deutschlandfunk.de/sagen-meinen-warum-medien-nicht-ueber-selbstmord-schreiben-100.html)
To me, this seems to be a plausible reason for the vague language, but again, I don't know.