They don't WANT to make money. They are consistently around the negative $3.2 - 3.4m figure each year. This probably isn't a large operation with hundreds of employees and multiple locations. I'm guessing there are a handful of executives pulling in $300k and some worker bees. They take the tax write-off and put in just enough effort to convince the IRS and the stock market they are a real company.
This is why we must not elect the current 'strongman' vying for public office in the US. This sort of practice will become institutionalized, along with victim blaming and shaming*.
Lest anyone think I have a liberal agenda please keep in mind that I'm basing my decision this election on the things uttered by the screaming carrot deamon for the past year. I don't care for his opponent, but this dude will ruin the country I fought for.
*Notice also that Comey's FBI outed a minor victim just last week.
Shouldn't be able to create security problems in the first place, HP. This is you screwing up. This is you screwing your customers over. This is me never buying your crap again.
Evaporated when he finished his ill-reasoned piece with an emoji.
Here is a real statistic. My D-TiVo has been on the fritz for about a month. I've been using the Leaf 30mi OTA antenna (one time cost of $40 a year or two ago) and I receive plenty of free content. We already get Amazon TV as a result of our Prime membership. Add in the DVDs that I already own and Netflix for 0.33/day and I'm set.
There are only five digits and just a few ways a single hand can arrange those digits. This particular symbol was used for thousands of years. The term 'longhorn' refers to any number of lazy, dumb, mouth breathing varmints (much like the President and lawyers at the University of Texas). I think this is a perfect First Amendment test case. Someone put out the Popehat signal.
"millions" Their sample size sounds impressive but is vanishingly small. Do they know how many miles Americans drive every day, to say nothing of the whole world?
Is that the Republican's screwed themselves with the whole "the people should decide" Supreme Court appointment (despite the PEOPLE deciding TWICE who to put in the top job). Seems like TPP is just as important as a judge.
This is why jurors need to be aware of their rights. Just nullification is legal and proper, especially when one group of defendants is treated differently than other groups for the same crimes.
And this is why we do not support companies that are 'allowed' to advertise with the Olympics. You have Olympic shit on your product? Great, helps me support your competition.
It wasn't just about annoying consumers. There was also all of the compliance efforts required by companies with websites that *might* possibly have a visitor from the ER.
Wouldn't this be covered under a public records statute (stayed up late watching, not enough coffee in me to bother looking them up), or at the very least under a 'this is a taxpayer funded building so there isn't a copyright' thing?
Re: David Who said that TechDirt has to publish entirely random articles?
OF COURSE TechDirt has an agenda. Many of them, actually. One of them being to document a continued campaign of misuse, untruth and outright lies by the people charged with enforcing the law. This officer swore an oath to obey the law and couldn't even be bothered to do that (so says the court, not me). The solution is simple, law enforcement must follow the law - even when it is inconvenient to do so or when they feel it impairs their ability to make an arrest (achieve some quota). And guess what, if he had followed the law he probably could have waited until the driver actually violated the law, and then Hey Presto, the drugs can be used as evidence.
Random example, the cop driving 65 in a 45 without 'blues & twos' yesterday morning. If he had to be somewhere in a hurry then turn on the lights, if not also the siren, because nobody expects freeway speeds on that road.
On the post: Congressman Goodlatte Decides To Refill The Swamp By Gutting Congressional Ethics Office... But Drops It After Bad Publicity
Re: Thad
On the post: Congressman Goodlatte Decides To Refill The Swamp By Gutting Congressional Ethics Office... But Drops It After Bad Publicity
" literally "
On the post: Rightscorp Rings In The New Year By Vowing To Find New Ways To Lose Money In 2017
I think you are all missing the bigger picture
On the post: Court Tells Nursing Home Company That Law Firm's Ads Targeting It Are Not A Form Of Trademark Infringement
How did the Appeals Court miss this one?
On the post: Pennsylvania Legislature Looking To Hide The Names Of Cops Who Deploy Excessive Or Deadly Force
Strongmen and dictatorial governments
Lest anyone think I have a liberal agenda please keep in mind that I'm basing my decision this election on the things uttered by the screaming carrot deamon for the past year. I don't care for his opponent, but this dude will ruin the country I fought for.
*Notice also that Comey's FBI outed a minor victim just last week.
On the post: HP Issues Flimsy Mea Culpa For Recent Printer Cartridge DRM Idiocy, But It's Not Enough
Printer refils
On the post: How I Taught A Jury About Trolls, Memes And 4Chan -- And Helped Get A Troll Out Of Jail
Keep fighing the good fight, Mike
On the post: Traffic Is Fake, Audience Numbers Are Garbage, And Nobody Knows How Many People See Anything
Re: that soggy "local" paper that's been sitting out in the rain on your porch for two days
On the post: Guy Arrested Over KickassTorrents Blocked From Talking To His US Attorney
Why are you surprised?
On the post: Gizmodo Completely Misses The Point Of Cord Cutting
Novak's credibility as a journalist
Here is a real statistic. My D-TiVo has been on the fritz for about a month. I've been using the Leaf 30mi OTA antenna (one time cost of $40 a year or two ago) and I receive plenty of free content. We already get Amazon TV as a result of our Prime membership. Add in the DVDs that I already own and Netflix for 0.33/day and I'm set.
On the post: University Of Texas Bullies Pastry Shop Over Donuts Shaped Like 'Hook 'Em Horns' Hands
Yeah, hard to see how the college has a case
On the post: Engineers Say If Automated Cars Experience 'The Trolley Problem,' They've Already Screwed Up
Bah
On the post: With Both Presidential Candidates Claiming To Be Against The TPP, President Obama Kicks Off Campaign To Ratify It
The problem with Lame Duck
On the post: NPR The Latest Website To Prevent You From Commenting Because It Simply Adores 'Relationships' And 'Conversation'
Stats
On the post: State Supreme Court Says Secret Software Used In Sentencing Determinations Not A Violation Of Due Process Rights
Sheesh - could the Court have punted any harder?
http://law2.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/zenger/nullification.html
https://www.aclu.org/feature/ fair-sentencing-act
On the post: How The Olympics Bullshit Ban On Tweeting About The Olympics Is Harming Olympic Athletes
I was out after Jim Thorpe
On the post: Florida International University Loses Trademark Appeal Against Florida National University
I like the implied FU swear in an appeals court ruling
On the post: EU Data Protection Official Says Revised Privacy Laws Should Ban Backdooring Encryption
Mike, don't forget
On the post: As Republicans Turn Off House Live Feed, Reps & C-SPAN Turn To Periscope And Facebook Live Video To Cover Sit In
What copyright, Mike?
On the post: Court Refuses To Uphold Evidence Seized During A Completely Bogus Traffic Stop
Re: David Who said that TechDirt has to publish entirely random articles?
Random example, the cop driving 65 in a 45 without 'blues & twos' yesterday morning. If he had to be somewhere in a hurry then turn on the lights, if not also the siren, because nobody expects freeway speeds on that road.
Next >>