My DirecTV bill just went up another $8.00/month. For my HD DVR I paid them $200 up front. Monthly I then get to pay them $10.00 to use the HD portion of it, and $10.00 to use the DVR portion of it. There is also a $7.00 a month rental fee for the machine, but they give me a $7.00 credit for the first TV.
When DirecTV started you bought your receiver elsewhere and just got the service from them. You had your choice of RCA, Sony, or Hughes receivers. Somewhere along the line they looked at the Cable gravy train and decided to hop on board. I guess they didn't realize that many of their customers came because they were ticked off with cable. Those customers are now ticked off with DirecTV and looking to find a good alternative.
Linking if fundamental to the internet working. If they don't want someone to link to their work, then they don't want people coming to their work, which then begs the question, "Why did you put your work on the internet in the first place?"
I don't understand why the courts continue to allow MM to take entire hard drives with people personal things on them, when there is case president that says you don't have to turn over your entire database, just the relevant records.
I know the argument is "How do we know they turned over all the relevant records". I think the courts should be appointing their own experts to review the hard drives and just report back to MM on if their movies (I use the term loosely) were found and if their is evidence that they were there and deleted. Giving the trolls unfettered access is ridiculous.
So if I read the bill right, it is okay for me to have strong encryption on my iPad, but not my iPhone if I buy them new in New York. It is also okay to have a iPhone with strong encryption if I buy a "Previously Owned, Like New" unit from the local Pawn Shop.
Does his family by any chance own a chain of Pawn Shops?
I didn't receive anything from t-Mobile, but I also don't have a capped data plan with them. I have their unlimited plan. I don't really do a lot of streaming with the phone, so don't know if my video is being throttled or not.
In the last line of the article, are you sure the strike-outs are in the correct group of words. I would assume they belong on the trailing group of words.
With Vance specifically calling out the iPhone, and saying it is totally out of reach of law enforcement, is it possible that before he made his announcement, he purchased a large block of Apple stock, and is trying to get all the crooks to give up their burner phones and buy iPhones?
Yes the most expensive pack of 3 white+color bulbs and a controller is $200, which at $60 a bulb makes the controller about $30. The entire pack is less that the $500 figure I objected about. You can get a white light only bulb for $15 which is not that out of line with non-intelligent LED bulbs.
I'm ticked at Phillips for introducing the non-campatability, but want to roast them for that, not some exaggerated cost figure.
The update shows up in your app showing there is one to be installed, but not giving you any detail about what it "fixes". It warns you the lights might flash during the process, but gives no hint it is going to brick the non-Phillips lights.
There have been two different college situations mentioned. If it a situation of a large group of kids buying one Go subscription and then sharing it, I see how someone could consider that a problem.
If it is college kids with the password for their home account then that seems exactly what that is designed for. While in college they are still in most cases for legal purposed residing at their parent's house. The HBO login is designed to allow you to watch content while away from home. The fact that they are away from home for four years is only a detail.
On the post: FCC Votes to Dismantle Cable's Monopoly Over The Set Top Box
Up Again
When DirecTV started you bought your receiver elsewhere and just got the service from them. You had your choice of RCA, Sony, or Hughes receivers. Somewhere along the line they looked at the Cable gravy train and decided to hop on board. I guess they didn't realize that many of their customers came because they were ticked off with cable. Those customers are now ticked off with DirecTV and looking to find a good alternative.
On the post: Fine Brothers History Of Overaggressive Behavior Doomed Their Plan; But Hopefully Others Will Revive The Good Parts
Re:
On the post: French Politicians Pushing To Ban Linking To Any Website Without Permission
Fundamental
On the post: Copyright Troll Malibu Media's 'Expert' Witness Appears To Be Totally And Completely Clueless
Re: Disks
On the post: Copyright Troll Malibu Media's 'Expert' Witness Appears To Be Totally And Completely Clueless
Disks
I know the argument is "How do we know they turned over all the relevant records". I think the courts should be appointing their own experts to review the hard drives and just report back to MM on if their movies (I use the term loosely) were found and if their is evidence that they were there and deleted. Giving the trolls unfettered access is ridiculous.
On the post: NY State Legislator Proposes Ban On Sale Of Encrypted Smartphones
Tablet
Does his family by any chance own a chain of Pawn Shops?
On the post: AT&T Is Happy To Remove Wireless Broadband Caps, But Only If You Sign Up For Its TV Services
Tethering
On the post: What Net Neutrality? T-Mobile Abusing Its 'Binge-On' Effort To Throttle Non-Partner Video
Re: Re:
On the post: Facebook Spam Tricks The Internet Into Supporting Company's AOL-ification Of Developing Nations
??
On the post: Manhattan District Attorney Still Totally Ignorant About Encryption, Slams Tim Cook & Demands Legislation To Wipe Out Encryption
On the post: Light Bulb DRM: Philips Locks Purchasers Out Of Third-Party Bulbs With Firmware Update
Re: Re: Re: Re: First World Problems
On the post: Light Bulb DRM: Philips Locks Purchasers Out Of Third-Party Bulbs With Firmware Update
Re: Re: Re: First World Problems
I'm ticked at Phillips for introducing the non-campatability, but want to roast them for that, not some exaggerated cost figure.
On the post: Light Bulb DRM: Philips Locks Purchasers Out Of Third-Party Bulbs With Firmware Update
Re: First World Problems
Hope that didn't spoil your sarcasm.
On the post: Light Bulb DRM: Philips Locks Purchasers Out Of Third-Party Bulbs With Firmware Update
Re: Update
On the post: FBI Director Says 'Smart People' At Office Supply Companies Can Help Limit Terrorists' Access To Pen And Paper
Re: Failed Test
1. Read the test in its entirety before beginning.
And the last item was.
99. Right your name at the top of the first page, and answer no other questions.
On the post: Did You Hear About How ISIS Has A Sophisticated Training Manual For Encryption? Yeah, It Was Actually A Pamphlet For Journalists And Activists
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Tim on the Run
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Re:
Those paper cuts can be deadly!
On the post: Cable CEO Is Really Pissed That HBO Hasn't Cracked Down On Streaming Password Sharing
Which is he complaining about?
If it is college kids with the password for their home account then that seems exactly what that is designed for. While in college they are still in most cases for legal purposed residing at their parent's house. The HBO login is designed to allow you to watch content while away from home. The fact that they are away from home for four years is only a detail.
On the post: Daily Deal: MOS Cable Organizer
Re: "good" magnets vs. "bad" magnets
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