As I understand the article, it's also a Level 1 offense to (during a visitation or phone call for example) direct someone 'on the outside' to update your profile/website. Doing so nets the same punishment and they'll try to have Facebook kill your profile for a violation of their ToS (providing a third-party with your password). With their overbroad definition of social media, asking a visitor to send an email or create an online petition for your freedom would even be an offense.
That, to me, is the larger issue here. This action is simply overkill if you're simply trying to keep inmates from running criminal enterprises or intimidating witnesses from behind bars, as there are already laws against those actions. Laws which, if convicted of violating, will actually increase an inmate's prison sentence unlike these penalties, many of which are slated to run longer than the inmate is even imprisoned.
The AC who replied to you is right. I'm in one of the grey counties in Michigan and I have 60/4 service from Charter (they upgraded me from 30/4 last July when they upgraded their equipment). So, while I still have broadband service, now I only have one available option for broadband service rather than three (Frontier [6/1] and VisionQuest Wireless [12/2] are my other options).
To be honest, the state governments are in charge of maintaining the highways (some states delegate part of this duty to local municipal governments). As such. their condition varies greatly depending on where you happen to be. The federal government did a pretty good job with their part, building them in the first place.
There are other reasons not to have the federal government owning communications infrastructure (I'm not sure I want to make surveillance easier) but, maintainance probably shouldn't be one of them.
I have jury duty on February 5th so, assuming I get selected, I'll be using this day to see any documents attached to the case I sit on the jury for. I don't think there are any cases coming up that would require a three-month trial around here after all (at least I hope not).
This isn't completely true. If you enter credit card information for them to bill quarterly (assuming you go over $15 of usage in three months) they do give you instant access without the snail mail issue.
Source: I just registered using my Google Wallet card and got instant access.
Re: Re: 'Big broadband is going to howl and protest...'
Since both houses of our Legislative branch are actually controlled by a single party now, they may actually start passing some actual legislation. I will probably be in disagreement with much of said legislation but, things will start coming out of there again. Whether or not this legislation gets signed by the President to become law on the other hand...I have the feeling that the next two years will be much like Bush's final two years. Let the veto party begin.
Chrome, by default, won't even let you override the warning on Google sites (and possibly some others but I'm not certain). The Chrome security engineer in question specifically changed settings to allow it to load so she could have proof of the man-in-the-middle attack.
Can you create sub-accounts with Comcast? I'm able to do that with Charter and each sub-account can access the 'TV Everywhere' features but, not the actual account information.
That's the thing, at the Marriotts in question, the WiFi isn't free. There's a fee to use it. Which, in my opinion, makes this that much worse. They're blocking competition to increase revenue.
The federal government wouldn't be doing the infringing though. The infringing party would be whomever provided the copy of the code to the government from their own systems. That's who would be sued under this extremely unlikely scenario.
They'd still be able to do some spam filtering based on the header (which can't be encrypted if you want your mail delivered) but, other than that, they could do the full anti-spam filtering at the time of decryption.
As I understand it, it is. These releases are only extending the copyright 20 years from now not 70. Unless the EU decides to extend copyright again, these particular recordings should enter the public domain January 1, 2035.
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Self-interest and a lack of spine
Concerning your every two year super election idea, the entire House of Representatives is elected on a two year cycle. Senators serve staggered six year terms and the President is elected every four years. We already, as a nation, vote for the entire House and one-third of the Senate every two years. I don't think adding the other two-thirds of the Senate and the President to that cycle would help much at all.
I don't know about Utah but, as someone who has just finished studying to become an insurance producer in Michigan there shouldn't be an issue as long as they don't discount the software for people who buy insurance. If their software is freeware regardless of the purchase of insurance it shouldn't be considered rebating.
I could see that working for the EU member country versions of Google for a day or so just to show the people what their governments are asking for. Of course, everyone would still be able to access Google.com to get normal results. The situation would have to get much worse before the pros would outnumber the cons for Google to do this though.
If you use an OTA antenna and access any of the networks that way, your category is already covered by Nielsen. In fact, I was in the same situation the one time my family's house was selected as a Nielsen house back when I still lived with my mother. It was quite an informative experience.
On the post: 'Officer Awareness' Memo: Police Accountability Recording App Could Lead To Dangerous 'Flash Mobs'
Re: Re: Anybody know...
On the post: Apple CEO Tim Cook Makes It Clear That He's Not At All Interested In Giving The Government Backdoors To iOS Encryption
Re: Re: Re:
On the post: South Carolina Says It's A Felony For Prisoners To Look At Facebook; Sends Many To Solitary Confinement
A Missing Point
That, to me, is the larger issue here. This action is simply overkill if you're simply trying to keep inmates from running criminal enterprises or intimidating witnesses from behind bars, as there are already laws against those actions. Laws which, if convicted of violating, will actually increase an inmate's prison sentence unlike these penalties, many of which are slated to run longer than the inmate is even imprisoned.
On the post: What Billions In Subsidies Bought: The Final Map Of Verizon's FiOS Fiber
Re:
On the post: Verizon Doubles Down On Bogus Claim Title II Will Kill Broadband Investment
Re: Re: If verizon hates title II
There are other reasons not to have the federal government owning communications infrastructure (I'm not sure I want to make surveillance easier) but, maintainance probably shouldn't be one of them.
On the post: BlackBerry CEO Thinks Net Neutrality Means Forcing Developers To Make Apps For His Struggling Platform
Re: Maybe everyone else isn't the problem.
On the post: Free Our Paywalled Court Documents: The Aaron Swartz Memorial PACER Cup Contest Announced
This will be interesting to try out
On the post: Free Our Paywalled Court Documents: The Aaron Swartz Memorial PACER Cup Contest Announced
Re:
Source: I just registered using my Google Wallet card and got instant access.
On the post: FCC Boss Now Making The Case For Reclassification, Rather Than Against It
Re: Re: 'Big broadband is going to howl and protest...'
On the post: Gogo Inflight Wifi Service Goes Man-In-The-Middle, Issues Fake Google SSL Certificates
Re: Re: Re: MITM is for your security. Right?
On the post: Comcast, NBC Have Learned Little, Still Cling Tightly To Broken 'TV Everywhere' Mindset
Re: Multiple credentials
On the post: Google, Microsoft, Wireless Carriers Form Rare Alliance To Battle Marriott's Dumb Wi-Fi 'Jamming'
Re:
On the post: Rep. Mike Rogers, On His Way Out Of Congress, Slams Obama For Not Launching Premature Cyberwar Against North Korea
Re: Re: Re: Nothing in the law?
On the post: Google Moves End-To-End Email Encryption Project To GitHub
Re:
On the post: Surprise: Spanish Newspapers Beg Government And EU To Stop Google News Shutting Down
Re: I said this earlier
On the post: Labels Barely Release 1964 Dylan, Beach Boys Archive Materials Solely To Get Extended Copyrights
Re: Backdate the copyright?
On the post: Rep. Latta Urges Congress To 'Preserve An Open & Free Internet' By Preventing The FCC From Doing So
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Self-interest and a lack of spine
On the post: Utah Wants To Kill Zenefits For Giving Away HR Software For Free
Rebating, really?
On the post: Forget EU's Toothless Vote To 'Break Up' Google; Be Worried About Nonsensical 'Unbiased Search' Proposal
Re: Google, EU version
On the post: After Calling Cord Cutting 'Purely Fiction' For Years, Nielsen Decides Just Maybe It Should Start Tracking Amazon, Netflix Viewing
Re: "zero TV households"?
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