Shell companies and such are perfectly legal, as are the bizarre and arcane financial instruments that Wall Street invents. All sorts of shady things are. I would be surprised if the accountants don't win awards.
Shush or the demands for complete deanonymization and internet identity cards will be back with a vengeance. (It might seem counterintuitive for the right to be forgotten system, but it isn't really.)
It's necessary because we developed a climate and culture of of this sort of behavior that has started to expand at an accelerated rate. And once it wins or loses one avenue of control or tax imposition, it goes looking for other avenues, no matter how small or stupid. The really bad wins just feed it even more.
I am quite sure these "societies" see what is going on elsewhere and then sit around brainstorming until they can come up with some next ridiculous claim to power and cash prizes. Think outside the box! (Can a fart that reminded people of some melody be considered a public performance? And under which rules can we demand compensation? Is this a sheet music thing or a you stole my song thing? We demand 80% of the cut from your fart.)
Except the bigger companies that do large scale solar, that get the big subsidy money, that sometimes fail to produce. That like to site in competitively environmentally destructive ways. Those, traditional big energy will at least play ball with.
I certainly have not seen the process through inception, but it seems like a lot of regulatory normalization involves raising protections or price-setting across the board while destroying environmental law from the outset. And yes, the empowering of corporations to control and make profit at the expense of people, countries, and the world certainly increases with the lobbying and the fact that some companies and industry groups get a seat at the table as stakeholders, none of this has any apparent positive effect on the total cost of trade by removal of tariffs (the theoretical point of the whole thing).
Maybe they were trade deals, once. But i am not overly convinced. Maybe it is a matter of perception.
True, this, among many other things normative to genders in reporting, and everywhere else, as we are yet instilled and even inculcated with this culturally.
It's possibly true that the reporter's intent was to show the extreme frustration in the situation and would report on men equally, but all too often this is not the case, and we can word things more carefully when it is. Particularly in a communications field.
Apparently only toxic enough that a handful (of people in offices who vote on these things) of Walloons oppose this, and only this, in CETA.
And i don't know why anyone refers to them as trade deals so much. Trade and free movement of people are like the bargaining chips to these agreements if anything.
Yes, it is an hilariously poor attempt at wording when the claim is for separation. It kind of leaps out and bites your nose as a mix of incompetence / phoning it in, a sort of fk you, and a have-my-cake-and-eat-it-too mentality.
So. We need one killer app that can soak the full bandwidth. Er, wouldn't that be exactly the time then that gigabit isn't enough? Particularly with more than one user at a location?
Or, you know, people might actually use something like that currently if they could get it and at a reasonable price without being murdered by usage caps...
Antifreeze might protect your engine at -65 C. But who needs that? No one drives in that. Make something different that doesn't have such a low freezing point, geez.
On the post: Comcast Joins AT&T, Files Lawsuit Against Nashville To Slow Google Fiber
Re: sounds likes kids bickering to me
On the post: Comcast Joins AT&T, Files Lawsuit Against Nashville To Slow Google Fiber
Re: Re:
On the post: Comcast Joins AT&T, Files Lawsuit Against Nashville To Slow Google Fiber
Re: really!?!?!
On the post: Hollywood Accounting Back In Court: How Has Spinal Tap Only Earned $81 In Merchandise Sales For Its Creators?
Re: Still amazing...
On the post: Hollywood Accounting Back In Court: How Has Spinal Tap Only Earned $81 In Merchandise Sales For Its Creators?
Re:
On the post: Why Wikipedia Is Worried About Global 'Right To Be Forgotten' Delistings
Re: The Soultion
Is that a typo or intentional? Because it's funny.
On the post: Why Wikipedia Is Worried About Global 'Right To Be Forgotten' Delistings
Re: But which Tim Maguire is me?
On the post: EU Advocate General Declares That Hotels Don't Need To Pay Copyright License To Have In-Room Television
I am quite sure these "societies" see what is going on elsewhere and then sit around brainstorming until they can come up with some next ridiculous claim to power and cash prizes. Think outside the box! (Can a fart that reminded people of some melody be considered a public performance? And under which rules can we demand compensation? Is this a sheet music thing or a you stole my song thing? We demand 80% of the cut from your fart.)
On the post: Utilities In Florida Are Using A Fake Consumer Group To Hamstring Solar Competition
Re: Re:
On the post: Corporate Sovereignty Helps To Bring EU-Canada Trade Deal To Brink Of Collapse
Re: Re:
Maybe they were trade deals, once. But i am not overly convinced. Maybe it is a matter of perception.
On the post: Corporate Sovereignty Helps To Bring EU-Canada Trade Deal To Brink Of Collapse
Re: Near to tears. Seriously?
It's possibly true that the reporter's intent was to show the extreme frustration in the situation and would report on men equally, but all too often this is not the case, and we can word things more carefully when it is. Particularly in a communications field.
On the post: As The Cubs Head To The World Series, The Team Is Also Raging Against Single-Word Trademarks
On the post: Corporate Sovereignty Helps To Bring EU-Canada Trade Deal To Brink Of Collapse
And i don't know why anyone refers to them as trade deals so much. Trade and free movement of people are like the bargaining chips to these agreements if anything.
On the post: NSA Says Federal Cyber Strategy Needs More NSA More Often, And On The Information Sharing Ground Floor
On the post: Dumb & Dumber Claims About Last Week's Internet Attack (SOPA?!? Really?)
Re: SOPA wins
A company providing authoritative DNS for a client owning a domain name != the root zone.
On the post: Chinese Company Recalls Cameras, DVRs Used In Last Week's Massive DDoS Attack
Re: Re: Re: Attack participation check
On the post: Shadow Warrior 2 Developers: We'd Rather Spend Our Time Making A Great Game Than Worrying About Piracy
Now your games are burned.
----
(hm. is it preview only, or is markdown not actually implemented yet?)
On the post: PINAC Director Sues Miami Beach Mayor Over Refusal To Release Social Media Blocklists
Re: Rather odd disclaimer
On the post: Vox Seems Kind Of Upset That We're Building Gigabit Networks With Bandwidth To Spare
Or, you know, people might actually use something like that currently if they could get it and at a reasonable price without being murdered by usage caps...
Antifreeze might protect your engine at -65 C. But who needs that? No one drives in that. Make something different that doesn't have such a low freezing point, geez.
On the post: Judge Rejects 'Rioting' Charge Against Journalist For Reporting On Protestors, But Prosecutor Still Looking For New Charges
Re: Re: Re: CROSSING THE LINE 5
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