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Privatus 6.2.6 macOS
Privatus has been designed from the ground up with simplicity in mind. After a quick initial setup, Privatus will take care of clearing your personal and private browsing tracks automatically after each browsing session.
Privatus just works! It has been designed for macOS Sierra, and takes the headaches out of cookie management, freeing your time to be more productive.
Clearing your cookies and cache can have the added benefit of speeding up your browsing experience.
Unlike many other Cookie managers, Privatus won’t delete your Browser Extensions!
Privatus supports all the major Mac OS X browsers: Safari, Firefox, Chrome, Chromium, and Opera.
Features:
Automated Cookie, Flash Cookie, Silverlight, Local Storage, Database, Cache, History, Favicons, Webpage previews, Form values and Downloads removal
One time setup, and forget
Accessible from the system menu bar
Highly intuitive
What’s New:
Version 6.2:
Now only macOS Mojave+
Removed Silverlight support
Improved safari cache removal
Fixed some removal issues
Compatibility: OS X 10.10 or later, 64-bit processor Homepagehttps://sweetpproductions.com/
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This article is part of a series on the politics and government of ancient Rome
Periods
Roman Kingdom 753–509 BC
Roman Republic 509–27 BC
Roman Empire 27 BC – AD 395
Roman Constitution
Precedent and law
Assemblies
Ordinary magistrates
Extraordinary magistrates
Titles and honours
In Roman law, the Latinadjectiveprivatus makes a legal distinction between that which is 'private' and that which is publicus, 'public' in the sense of pertaining to the Roman people (populus Romanus).
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Used as a substantive, the term privatus refers to a citizen who is not a public official or a member of the military.[1] Increasingly throughout the Middle and Late Republic, the privatus was nevertheless sometimes granted imperium during a crisis; the definition of crisis was elastic, and the amassing of power by unelected individuals (privati) contributed to the breakdown of the checks and balances of the republican system.[2]
Legal terms[edit]
Res privatae, private property, or 'things belonging to individuals,' in contrast to res publicae.[3]
Res privata Caesaris, the property of the emperor that was purely private.
Ager privatus, privately owned land as distinguished from ager publicus.
Actiones privatae, actions protecting an individual's private interests; similar to iudicia privata, referring to civil trials presided over by the iudex privatus (below).[4]
Iter privatum, a private road.[5]
Carcer privatus, a private prison. This form of incarceration was used for slaves, and in early time for debtors who failed to pay their creditors (see nexum). The emperors Zeno and Justinian prohibited private prisons.[6]
Iudex privatus[edit]
The iudex privatus was a sole arbitrator or lay judge who conducted a civil case to which the parties had consented and who usually nominated him. In the event that the parties could not agree on a judge, he was chosen from an official list of potential judges drawn up by the praetor. He was also called a iudex unus.[7]
References[edit]
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^Adolf Berger, Encyclopedic Dictionary of Roman Law (American Philological Association, 1953), p. 651.
^T. Corey Brennan, The Praetorship in the Roman Republic (Oxford University Press, 2000), pp. 154 online, 610, et passim.
^Berger, Encyclopedic Dictionary of Roman Law, p. 670.
^Berger, Encyclopedic Dictionary of Roman Law, p. 347.
^Berger, Encyclopedic Dictionary of Roman Law, p. 517.
^Berger, Encyclopedic Dictionary of Roman Law, p. 381.
^George Mousourakis, The Historical and Institutional Context of Roman Law (Ashgate, 2003), p. 128 online.
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