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The announcement also notes that Discord will now offer a
The announcement also notes that Discord will now offer a 10-percent cut for each new game added to the game community, and will be giving away a limited number of games to encourage more community building. The cut will not affect any existing game on the game site, but will be distributed around the world, as well as being the last piece in a larger roll-out of Discord's community building.
The cut will begin in the US on February 15 and ends in Canada on February 27, and in Europe on April 7, with a final cut of 15% of revenue at that point in 2015.
Source: DiscordThe U.S. Supreme Court is considering whether a Virginia Supreme Court judge can block a state law on abortion that prohibits abortion through an ultrasound.
The case is the first to be thrown out of the U.S. Supreme Court this year, and there is no consensus among states about whether it would be overturned.
The measure, passed in 2006, requires that the state make a physician's recommendation about whether a fetal heartbeat is needed to determine whether to terminate a pregnancy. The Virginia law, known as the "partial-birth abortion bill," was approved by a majority of all the state's 11 counties, and was signed into law by then-Gov. Bob McDonnell in 2014.
The law requires women seeking abortions to undergo an ultrasound, but it doesn't specify which state would provide it.
The court has been hearing arguments in two cases, and last week it said it wouldn't consider the state's position on the law. The high court is also considering whether the law is constitutional. Virginia law requires the state to follow the same procedure as other states.
Virginia's law is likely to stay in place, but it is unlikely to be overturned.
In 2013, the Virginia Supreme Court upheld a case that ended a state law allowing women who had abortions to choose between a life-saving abortion and an end to the pregnancy. The justices said the law did not violate the Eighth Amendment.
The justices also said that the state had the authority to use fetal heartbeat ultrasound to determine whether a woman would be deemed viable for adoption.
Under the current law, a woman's life is at risk when the fetus is born.
But the Supreme Court is likely to take that position this year, and in March the court heard oral arguments in another case about whether a Virginia woman could be tried for having an abortion. That case was about a woman who had a miscarriage
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