The European MPs are supposed to represent the variation within the states they represent. For example, Poland's MP's are based on proportion of the parties' votes.The idea that countries are voting as blocs on this should be disappointing and does not represent the complexities of the countries they are supposed to be representing.
It is amazing how many people in the business of sharing electronic media still think of it in terms of exchanging physical goods. All they are doing is sharing bits, and they feel a need to control numbers. Scarcity in this context is artificial, and they cannot wrap their heads around the idea that the supply curve is different, and they cannot shift and control it.
Linkedin is a bit more insidious than the others in that they wish to make themselves important to people's livelihoods. If they become an important part of the employment process then it becomes harder for people to simply avoid them. It is like trying to build a honeypot.
They already set priorities by sorting and setting the order that links to torrents are displayed. The use of a monetary reward only insures that other people get a share of the wealth. Why did they wait till now to get upset over bias in how seeds are shared?
You lost me when you presumed that the state would be mature and reasonable about losing control and allowing the little people the same access to information as the important people(TM). Although, I am sure they are willing to forgo forcing police officers to have to take the trouble to know any of the laws they are supposed to enforce when they can just make up their own instead.
Seems a bit arrogant for the photographer to assume that it was his pictures that sold all those items. It is not as if people go into Walmart just to hang out with friends but upon seeing a nice glossy photo think to themselves, "Damn, that is one sweet tube of toothpaste in that picture. I need me some of that!"
What were the requirements under GDPR for the person who received the recordings? Did the person break the rules by sharing the data? Is the person required to take the same precautions as Amazon was supposed to take?
If someone send you this information on accident what kind of burdens does the GDPR impose on you?
All those people critical of Melissa Mayer should be thinking twice. Despite decades of trying nobody was able to turn Yahoo! into a viable media company, and Verizon could not do it with its notable resources. Mayer was at least able to foist it off on some rather unclever saps for an oversize sum of money. That is more than any of its other CEOs were able to achieve.
There is plenty of prior art for the application of formal systems in verifying algorithms. See for example MIT's PS+SE group. Software to verify formal logic systems has been in use for a long time now, and formal systems has been a focus of academic research for well over a decade. The software of evaluating formal systems is well known, and the hard part is developing the system of formal logic to define a problem in question.
There is no way an artist can "prove" that another work has not been sampled or used in a given piece. This is not a real standard that can be applied in a consistent way, and it can only be applied in arbitrarily. The burden of proof is on the wrong party.
How about we just stop worshiping law enforcement officers. If certain people in power would be capable of recognizing that they are fallible human beings that are not deserving of unequivocal praise and power without question that might solve a whole host of problems.
Sadly, we are once again in the position of trying to have a serious conversation about a tweet. We have given up even trying to make a joke about what is happening and simply accepting that this is how adults are supposed to discuss important matters. Children in pre-school should be pointing at us and laughing, but they have better interpersonal skills.
On the post: Appeals Court Says A Person Driving A Registered Vehicle On A Public Road Is Not 'Reasonably Suspicious'
They appealed this?
The fact that the prosecutors appealed this thinking they could still get away with it just further demonstrates how bad the system is.
On the post: French Defense Secretary Says Country Is Willing To Fire First In Cyber Wars
Silent room
On the post: EU Cancels 'Final' Negotiations On EU Copyright Directive As It Becomes Clear There Isn't Enough Support
MP and proportional voting
On the post: Why Does Everyone Else Want To Stop Netflix Password Sharing, When Netflix Is Fine With It?
electronic media is not widgets
On the post: LinkedIn Is Helping The Chinese Government Silence Critics
Re: You'd think a shift like that would have been on the news...
On the post: LinkedIn Is Helping The Chinese Government Silence Critics
To make matters worse
On the post: Facebook Rejects GRIS Launch Trailer For Being Sexually Suggestive When It Clearly Is Not
Training matters
On the post: No, BitTorrent's Plan for Cryptocurrency-Fueled Speed Boosts Doesn't Violate 'Net Neutrality'
How is this different?
On the post: Despite Losing Its Copyright Case, The State Of Georgia Still Trying To Stop Carl Malamud From Posting Its Laws
Mature and reasonable - lol
You lost me when you presumed that the state would be mature and reasonable about losing control and allowing the little people the same access to information as the important people(TM). Although, I am sure they are willing to forgo forcing police officers to have to take the trouble to know any of the laws they are supposed to enforce when they can just make up their own instead.
On the post: Photographer Licenses Photo To Shutterstock, Is Shocked When It Plays Out Exactly How Everyone Would Imagine
Who sold those items?
On the post: Copyright, Culture, Sharing, Remix... And A Congresswoman Dancing As A College Student
But those dance moves
Perhaps the movie studios who produced The Breakfast Club will sue everyone based on their copyright of the dance moves.
On the post: Once Again, GDPR Is A Potential Privacy Nightmare: Amazon Sends 1,700 Voice Recordings To The Wrong User In GDPR Request
What should the person have done?
If someone send you this information on accident what kind of burdens does the GDPR impose on you?
On the post: CBS Eyes Ditching Nielsen As Streaming, Cord Cutting Change The Game
More money for the rest of us!
Also, looking forward to the time when I can not purchase access to a large number of media outlets rather than not purchasing from just the one.
On the post: If You're Surprised By Verizon's AOL, Yahoo Face Plant, You Don't Know Verizon
Mayer's genius
On the post: New York Police Union Says More Reporting On Stops/Frisks Will Hurt The NYPD's Effectiveness
proactive misconduct
On the post: Cubs, Nationals Launch Another Trademark Opposition Over A 'W' Logo
Too little, too late
On the post: Stupid Patent Of The Month: A Patent On Using Mathematical Proofs
How is this new?
There is plenty of prior art for the application of formal systems in verifying algorithms. See for example MIT's PS+SE group. Software to verify formal logic systems has been in use for a long time now, and formal systems has been a focus of academic research for well over a decade. The software of evaluating formal systems is well known, and the hard part is developing the system of formal logic to define a problem in question.
On the post: SoundCloud Troll Getting DMCA Takedowns Shows The Weakness Of Notice And Takedown Systems
The Burden Is On The Wrong Person
On the post: Police Misconduct, Data Breaches, And The Ongoing Lack Of Accountability That Allows These To Continue
Or Just Not Treat Law Enforcement As Gods
On the post: Donald Trump Suddenly Pretends To Care About Comcast Antitrust Violations
Serious discussions about tweets
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