I'll agree that businesses are people when the same penalties can be applied to them as to actual individual people. For example when a business can be sent to prison for committing a crime, instead of just paying a fine.
The problem today is that businesses get all of the benefits of being treated as a person, but very few of the same penalties apply. Businesses get away with crimes every day that an individual person would go to prison for.
Yeah, Google is top dog in the mobile ad space, but only because they bought Admob.
There are at least a dozen companies in the mobile ad space that have annual revenue of $100 million or more. Sure they are small compared to Google as a whole, but they are players in the mobile market.
The price is good, but not exceptional. This unit is comparable to the EC Tech units that usually go for $39-$40 on Amazon. Biggest difference is aesthetics and a 2A port on the EC Tech instead of 1.5 on the Innori.
Personally I prefer the newer Anker units with the PowerIQ ports, so I don't have to remember which port is which amperage. ;-)
Overall this is a good deal and some proceeds go to supporting Techdirt.
This concept is what the classic "military industrial complex" of Eisenhower fame is all about. Once you use or show your latest weapon it will be copied and/or countered. Which in turn means you need a bigger, better, newer weapon. Of course the for profit contractors are more than happy to help build those new weapons, and of course now sell the older stuff to anyone in the world willing to pay for them.
I bet they were using Microsoft Outlook and Exchange for their email. When you use this combo a senders email address is not displayed. Only the friendly person name is displayed by default, and this is easy to fake. Unless you have some technical expertise you wouldn't even know to look.
Now personally I would double check before sending a single penny somewhere, but I know places where millions, if not tens of millions of dollars are authorized to be moved/paid with just a few emails every day.
Ticket fines have been relied on as a significant source of revenue in Chicago for decades.
One of the most telling observations I made when I moved to Chicago 25 years ago was that the vehicles driven by those giving out parking tickets do no say Police Department on them, they say Department of Revenue!
I've always used the moving reason, even when not moving. It just gets things done faster. If anyone were to ever ask where to I would just give them the address of my in-laws dairy farm. The nearest town is miles away and the town is too small to even have cable TV.
It's pretty easy to show financial gain. It's just not all that much money in the end however.
The autopsy photo was probably obtained at no or little cost. Maybe a couple hundred dollars of peoples time to make and edit copies of the original.
The alternative would have been to have a special effects team create a similar photo. This would have easily cost $10,000, $20,000 or even more, to make a fake body, rent the props and location, hire a photographer, photo shop work, etc.
So the financial gain is the difference between what they paid for the exiting photo and having to pay for someone to stage things. Nowhere near the amounts that people might think of as a "financial gain", but a gain none the less.
The only time I have seen training systems that used dummy data were third party training. Every internal training system I have seen has always been a full or partial clone of a production system. In fact the training system is almost never a separate system just for training. Usually it is a test or development environment. Hell I have even seen training done on a production system.
Sure best practice would be to have a separate training system with dummy data, but most of the world doesn't work that way because management just see's it as a extra unnecessary cost. Much like electronic/software security in general.
I wrote thousands of lines of code between 1990 and 1996 for an embedded system that is still sold today, with only minor changes to the code. So some of it is now 24 years old. Haven't gotten any extra money and never expected to.
This is what you get when you outsource the running of the government to for profit companies. Of course those companies are going to put profit before anything else. It is their entire reason for existing.
Sure government is bureaucratic and slow, but for some things, like background checks and security clearances, that is exactly what you want. The old school, cold war era security agency guy must either be cringing or spinning in their graves.
Don't even bother with a DVD rip. Have a legitimately downloaded video. They won't even realize it is legit until well after you are arrested and charged, and your lawyer points it out. Then you sue them.
Now that multiple such agreements have been exposed I expect that the FTC is going to come and have a look. That should open up a big can of worms.
There is nothing really wrong with having promotional arrangements. They have existed for over a century in one form or another. The problem is when you try to hide it.
The really funny thing about security clearances, is that a lot of people have them. From the reported numbers in 2010 over 1.1 million people have TS/SCI. About 45% of them being contractors. The other 55% being actual employees of the federal government. At a place like the NSA I would think something like 90%+ of the people there would have TC/SCI clearance.
So pretty much anyone at the agency had access. Unless you were maybe the dishwasher in the cafeteria.
60 Minutes really lost it's punch and credibility when they pushed out Don Hewitt 10+ years ago. It's all just fluff now to help bring in advertising dollars.
On the post: Chris Christie: Your NSA Fears Are Bullshit And Civil Liberties Advocates Are Extremists
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
The problem today is that businesses get all of the benefits of being treated as a person, but very few of the same penalties apply. Businesses get away with crimes every day that an individual person would go to prison for.
On the post: European Mobile Networks Plan To Block Ads, Not For Your Safety, But To Mess With Google
Re:
There are at least a dozen companies in the mobile ad space that have annual revenue of $100 million or more. Sure they are small compared to Google as a whole, but they are players in the mobile market.
On the post: Daily Deal: Innori 22400mAh Portable Battery Pack
Decent Price
Personally I prefer the newer Anker units with the PowerIQ ports, so I don't have to remember which port is which amperage. ;-)
Overall this is a good deal and some proceeds go to supporting Techdirt.
On the post: Why Online Attacks By Nations Are Problematic: Enemies Can Learn From Your Digital Weapons, Then Turn Improved Versions Against You
Nothing New
On the post: Is Arduino Heading Towards The First Open Hardware Fork?
Not a lot of difference
On the post: 55th Largest Private Company In America Sent Millions To China Because An Email Told Them To
Not as easy to spot as you might think
Now personally I would double check before sending a single penny somewhere, but I know places where millions, if not tens of millions of dollars are authorized to be moved/paid with just a few emails every day.
On the post: Cyberattack Results In Physical Damage To German Steel Mill's Blast Furnance
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I lived in Chicago for 13 years, and while bulletproof windows are uncommon, steel doors are pretty common. Two of the three places I lived had them.
Also bars, but not bulletproofing, on ground floor windows are fairly common as well.
Finally steel doors are actually less expensive than a quality solid wooden door these days.
On the post: That Crazy Story About Making 'Hate Speech' A Crime? Yeah, That's Satire
Re: Re: Re: Re:
On the post: Complete Failure: Chicago's Speed Camera Traps Fail To Bring In The Revenue Mayor Emanuel Counted Upon
Re:
One of the most telling observations I made when I moved to Chicago 25 years ago was that the vehicles driven by those giving out parking tickets do no say Police Department on them, they say Department of Revenue!
On the post: UK Crime Agency Boss: 'Yes, The Public Must Give Up Its Liberty If It Wants Security'
If only it were true
On the post: Behind The Veil Part 2: Let's All Look At Comcast's Customer Retention Playbook For Its Employees!
On the post: Family Sues Over Autopsy Images Appearing In Southland Opening Montage
Re: Re:
The autopsy photo was probably obtained at no or little cost. Maybe a couple hundred dollars of peoples time to make and edit copies of the original.
The alternative would have been to have a special effects team create a similar photo. This would have easily cost $10,000, $20,000 or even more, to make a fake body, rent the props and location, hire a photographer, photo shop work, etc.
So the financial gain is the difference between what they paid for the exiting photo and having to pay for someone to stage things. Nowhere near the amounts that people might think of as a "financial gain", but a gain none the less.
On the post: LAPD Exposes Login To Data Harvesting Software During Interview With CNN
Re: Re: Re: Don't Cheapen Real Security Screw-ups
Sure best practice would be to have a separate training system with dummy data, but most of the world doesn't work that way because management just see's it as a extra unnecessary cost. Much like electronic/software security in general.
On the post: Can Anyone Name A Programmer Still Getting Paid For Code He Wrote In 1962?
Re: Re: Re: Re: Oh, there are some...
On the post: Italian Officials Claim American Gun Ad Featuring Michelangelo's David Is 'Illegal'
Re: Art History majors, to arms!
On the post: DOJ Says Company That Vetted Snowden Faked 665,000 Background Checks
Profit Above All
Sure government is bureaucratic and slow, but for some things, like background checks and security clearances, that is exactly what you want. The old school, cold war era security agency guy must either be cringing or spinning in their graves.
On the post: MPAA & ICE Confirm They Interrogated A Guy For Wearing Google Glass During A Movie
Re:
On the post: Buying Positive Coverage Of The Xbox One On YouTube Is Dumb On So Many Levels
Waiting for the FTC
There is nothing really wrong with having promotional arrangements. They have existed for over a century in one form or another. The problem is when you try to hide it.
On the post: NSA Admits Lots Of People Could Have Done What Snowden Did
A Lot of People Have Clearance
So pretty much anyone at the agency had access. Unless you were maybe the dishwasher in the cafeteria.
On the post: CBS Airs NSA Propaganda Informercial Masquerading As 'Hard Hitting' 60 Minutes Journalism By Reporter With Massive Conflict Of Interest
Lost Credibility
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