I can't wait to see how they'll twist this decrease to make it look like Americans are surfing in 100Gbps connections with 110% stability, reliability and availability allover the country.
1- true, but you could take some steps to verify and then purge the documents possibly. And you can verify people with just enough data (and possibly a live chat).
2- You can set parameters to make certain reports go to human verification. Ie: recently created accounts would just be suspended unless the user actively asks for review, verified accounts and those above a certain age/activity would go through a human at all times.
3- You do have a point but it could be done while respecting the user privacy and even allowing pseudonyms.
I kind of agree with you. But instead of making registration harder you could restrict functionality to accounts until they are verified. It may lead to some awaiting but I believe people would be willing to wait for the added security layer.
Thanks for this follow up. I doubt the person behind the comment will change his/her mind considering how even widely available statistics didn't do the job. But it's nice to see so much information spawning from the bs comment.
Remember what was the real justification behind the war on drugs? It was to hit hard on the anti-war crowd and black people. This is the authoritarian idiot's wet dream.
Look, those jeans were seen in the crime scene! And what a coincidence, my fiercest dissident is using them! SAD!
Sure it counts. The majority of the ones whining and pushing for more copyrights or simply showing support for the monstrosity that copyright is are the copyright holders and overall people who never created anything good. And quite a few of those thrive on building on top of the public domain.
So, what personal story devoid of evidence and verifiable facts you'll tell us to support the monstrosity?
The idea behind the GDPR certainly is pretty sound and even desirable to some degree. The implementation? Not so much. And to think these same giants brought it upon themselves by abusing their position and the data consumers are handing them.
I hope the EU will rethink it and use the initial numbers to go back to the drawing board to fix these problems before imposing fines. The cynic in me says they'll use this selectively and collateral damage be damned.
Articles like this keep me wondering how many awesome stuff got killed either at the idea level because it wasn't worth the effort of navigating the copyright mess or in early stages because of legal bullying.
First thing I thought. The whole thing has so many obvious evidence that shady behavior was happening and Pai refused to acknowledge and investigate that I can't see how he hasn't engaged in fraud. I doubt you can call it gross negligence at this point.
"So, a smart person buys a smart TV and never connects it to the net to dumb it down - problem solved."
That. But do we really trust it won't jump in and connect to the first unsecured wifi connection? I still think a dumb TV set is a goal we should strive to achieve.
On the post: Guy Who Forged A Court Order To Delist Content Issues More Bogus Takedown Notices To Remove Posts Discussing His Forgery
On the post: Remember When Ajit Pai Said Killing Net Neutrality Would Boost Network Investment? About That...
On the post: Herrick V. Grindr – The Section 230 Case That's Not What You've Heard
Re:
2- You can set parameters to make certain reports go to human verification. Ie: recently created accounts would just be suspended unless the user actively asks for review, verified accounts and those above a certain age/activity would go through a human at all times.
3- You do have a point but it could be done while respecting the user privacy and even allowing pseudonyms.
On the post: Herrick V. Grindr – The Section 230 Case That's Not What You've Heard
Re: Re: Re:
On the post: FBI Forensic Experts Claim Mass-Produced Jeans And Shirts Are As Distinct As Fingerprints And DNA
Re: Re: Re:
On the post: FBI Forensic Experts Claim Mass-Produced Jeans And Shirts Are As Distinct As Fingerprints And DNA
Look, those jeans were seen in the crime scene! And what a coincidence, my fiercest dissident is using them! SAD!
On the post: There Was Heavy Tech Lobbying On Article 13... From The Company Hoping To Sell Everyone The Filters
On the post: Lucasfilm Steps In After FanFilm That Tried To Follow The Rules Was Claimed By Disney Over Star Wars Music
Re: Re: Re: Re:
So, what personal story devoid of evidence and verifiable facts you'll tell us to support the monstrosity?
On the post: Trump Hotel Fracas Highlights How T-Mobile's Consumer-Friendly Brand Schtick Is Wearing A Little Thin
Wall-e is starting to look mora like a prophecy than some hearth warming animation.
On the post: Max Schrems Files New Privacy Complaints That Seem To Show The Impossibility Of Complying With The GDPR
The road to Hell is paved with good intentions.
The idea behind the GDPR certainly is pretty sound and even desirable to some degree. The implementation? Not so much. And to think these same giants brought it upon themselves by abusing their position and the data consumers are handing them.
I hope the EU will rethink it and use the initial numbers to go back to the drawing board to fix these problems before imposing fines. The cynic in me says they'll use this selectively and collateral damage be damned.
On the post: Lucasfilm Steps In After FanFilm That Tried To Follow The Rules Was Claimed By Disney Over Star Wars Music
Copyright is a cancer that kills creativity.
On the post: NY Court Tells NYPD It Can't Hide Surveillance Of Protesters Behind A Glomar Response
Re: Re: Re: Rotten to the core
On the post: NY Court Tells NYPD It Can't Hide Surveillance Of Protesters Behind A Glomar Response
Re: Rotten to the core
Sounds like a plan.
On the post: FCC Wants Delay In Net Neutrality Trial Due To Government Shutdown, But Isn't Likely To Get It
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
On the post: FCC Wants Delay In Net Neutrality Trial Due To Government Shutdown, But Isn't Likely To Get It
Re:
On the post: How The GDPR Is Still Ruining Christmas
Re: Re: Re: Ploy by retailers to avoid returns.
On the post: Supermacs Beats McDonalds To Have 'Big Mac' Trademark Cancelled In Europe
Re: Re:
On the post: Ajit Pai Refuses To Brief Congress On What He Plans To Do About Wireless Location Data Scandals
On the post: Vizio Admits Modern TV Sets Are Cheaper Because They're Spying On You
Re: Re:
That. But do we really trust it won't jump in and connect to the first unsecured wifi connection? I still think a dumb TV set is a goal we should strive to achieve.
On the post: Hollywood Asks EU To Drop Article 13 Entirely, Because It Might Possibly Have A Tiny Compromise For The Internet
Next >>