Hopefully he is given an orange jump suit that matches his facial coloring and his hair.
Will he be allowed to play with his Tweeter in prison? Will we get daily updates about how wonderful he is doing in prison? How everyone tells him how great he is going. People write him every day to congratulate him. Etc.
This article is about a company trying to weasel out of an arbitration barrage:
But a federal judge in San Francisco wasn’t willing to go along with it. The judge, William Alsup, ordered DoorDash in February to proceed with the American Arbitration Association cases and pay the fees.
But in a hearing, Judge Alsup questioned whether the company and its lawyers really believed that.
“Your law firm and all the defense law firms have tried for 30 years to keep plaintiffs out of court,” the judge told lawyers for Gibson Dunn late last year. “And so finally someone says, ‘OK, we’ll take you to arbitration,’ and suddenly it’s not in your interest anymore. Now you’re wiggling around, trying to find some way to squirm out of your agreement.”
“There is a lot of poetic justice here,” the judge added.
Judge Alsup was the judge who learned Java in order to understand the Oracle vs Google case better.
Especially if a CEO issues an executive odor to keep the BOM and 3D printable designs a secret so nobody could download them to print replacement parts.
but the fact that the letter literally spends three pages whining about just the "hoax" line
We're going to whine so much. You're going to get tired of whining. you’re going to say, ‘Please Mr. President, I have a headache. Please, don't whine so much. This is getting terrible.’ And I'm going to say, ‘No, we have to make America great again.’ You're gonna say, ‘Please.’ I said, ‘Nope, nope. We're gonna keep whining.’
If so there needs to also be some serious "under penalty of perjury" payback.
If there can be a statutory $150,000.00 per instance penalty for copyright infringement, how about an equal statutory penalty for every defective DMCA notice? After all, once an infringement is identified, it seems someone should at least have a quick look at it to see if it even passes the laugh test before firing off a DMCA notice. If you're going to be given super duper DMCA takedown powers without due process, then there better be some super duper due diligence so that legitimate content and speech are not censored.
But what incentive would he have without a patent?
If he didn't get a patent, then what could possibly explain why he would develop such a vaccine? What incentive could there possibly be other than unbridled greed? It doesn't make cents.
So now a warrant is required for facial recognition tech.
OMG, there is a new crisis of somethingorother. We need to deploy facial recognition tech at these specific locations, looking for these specific individuals. Warrant granted!
Now this just set a precedent. Next time it becomes easier to get a warrant to apply mass facial recognition tech. Eventually it is a mere formality to get it rubber stamped by the clerk of the court.
The video games nor the video game manufacturers are to blame.
Unknown to the manufacturers, there is code hidden in their games that secretly generates an undetectable signal which appears successively in each frame of the game. Exposure to this signal gradually causes the players to become aware of undetectable signals from government satellites which transform players into government controlled robots.
The proof is that these signals and the code in the games are undetectable and cannot be shown to exist.
I personally find that the best protection is to fashion your aluminum headwear using TWO layers of aluminum foil. This more than doubles the effectiveness due to a resonance effect which develops between the two layers at exactly double the frequency of the government's invisible brain lasers. (take the effectiveness of a single layer of aluminum foil and multiply by a coefficient greater than 2.0.) Furthermore, if you fashion your aluminum hat with two antennas instead of the usual one, this further increases the effectiveness by an additional 37 %.
I'm not talking crazy tin foil hat conspiracy theories here. You MUST use aluminum foil hats to protect yourself from this insidious threat in these dangerous times.
I'll let others address the privacy implications of Ring, and that Ring hands over video to police and government behind the backs of the property owner and camera owner.
Those things ignored . . .
Someday, Ring might actually reduce crime. Today, at best, it might only deter some crime, or help catch crimes that continue to occur. This might, eventually, make crime decrease some as crooks avoid Ring infested properties.
However those crimes might simply move to other properties that are not infected with Ring.
Profiles. The ability to create separate identities for individual family members under a single billing account. That way each family member gets a personal favorites list, and personalized suggestions of junk they should watch to destroy their brain cells.
Hulu and Starz also do this.
Others seem to think that you should have to buy a separate account for each family member.
They are delusional. Kidding themselves. Living in a fantasy world unhinged from the reality of the lives of most subscribers. Most subscribers cannot simply tighten their belt by the austerity of buying one fewer luxury cars this year.
Then the streaming services are surprised when family members share a password and are unhappy about the lack of separate play lists and suggestions.
On the post: Is There Any Form Of Corruption Senator Burr Didn't Engage In?
I think he has not taken lobbyist money in order to defund school lunch programs in order to fund athletic programs for wealthy kids.
On the post: Trump Campaign Actually Sues TV Station Over Anti-Trump Ad
Re:
You are forgetting something: Trump has absolute authority.
Just keep repeating that line. Think about its implications.
On the post: Trump Campaign Actually Sues TV Station Over Anti-Trump Ad
Re:
Hopefully he is given an orange jump suit that matches his facial coloring and his hair.
Will he be allowed to play with his Tweeter in prison? Will we get daily updates about how wonderful he is doing in prison? How everyone tells him how great he is going. People write him every day to congratulate him. Etc.
On the post: Corporations Not Happy Innovators Have 'Hacked' The Crappy U.S. Binding Arbitration System
This article is about a company trying to weasel out of an arbitration barrage:
Judge Alsup was the judge who learned Java in order to understand the Oracle vs Google case better.
On the post: Red Light Camera Company Says It's Dying Of Coronavirus
Re: Market farces?
Corporations are people too!
So maybe they should be able to get corporate diseases and die.
On the post: Manufacturers Refuse To Allow Hospitals To Fix Ventilators That Are The Last Hope For Many COVID-19 Patients
It does make scents
Especially if a CEO issues an executive odor to keep the BOM and 3D printable designs a secret so nobody could download them to print replacement parts.
On the post: EU Says That, No, Rental Car Companies Don't Need To Pay A License To Rent Cars With Radios That Might Play Music
Something I don't understand?
Why are they called "Collection Societies"?
I thought organizations like this were called "Collection Rackets" and prosecuted.
On the post: President Trump Is So Upset About This Ad Showing His Failed Handling Of COVID-19 That He's Demanding It Be Taken Down
The unforgiveable sin
OMG!!! They used the president's own words!!
That's the same thing the evil media has done!
On the post: President Trump Is So Upset About This Ad Showing His Failed Handling Of COVID-19 That He's Demanding It Be Taken Down
Three pages whining
We're going to whine so much. You're going to get tired of whining. you’re going to say, ‘Please Mr. President, I have a headache. Please, don't whine so much. This is getting terrible.’ And I'm going to say, ‘No, we have to make America great again.’ You're gonna say, ‘Please.’ I said, ‘Nope, nope. We're gonna keep whining.’
On the post: RIAA Realizes It Sued Charter Over A Bunch Of Songs It Doesn't Hold The Copyrights For
Did they file any DMCA notices?
If so there needs to also be some serious "under penalty of perjury" payback.
If there can be a statutory $150,000.00 per instance penalty for copyright infringement, how about an equal statutory penalty for every defective DMCA notice? After all, once an infringement is identified, it seems someone should at least have a quick look at it to see if it even passes the laugh test before firing off a DMCA notice. If you're going to be given super duper DMCA takedown powers without due process, then there better be some super duper due diligence so that legitimate content and speech are not censored.
On the post: 67 Years Ago Today: Jonas Salk Announced The Polio Vaccine... And Did NOT Patent It
But what incentive would he have without a patent?
If he didn't get a patent, then what could possibly explain why he would develop such a vaccine? What incentive could there possibly be other than unbridled greed? It doesn't make cents.
On the post: Washington State Legislators Pass Bill Blocking Use Of Facial Recognition Tech Without A Warrant
Slippery Slope
So now a warrant is required for facial recognition tech.
OMG, there is a new crisis of somethingorother. We need to deploy facial recognition tech at these specific locations, looking for these specific individuals. Warrant granted!
Now this just set a precedent. Next time it becomes easier to get a warrant to apply mass facial recognition tech. Eventually it is a mere formality to get it rubber stamped by the clerk of the court.
On the post: After Years Of Being Blamed For Everything, The World Turns To Video Games To Escape During Coronavirus Shut-In
Video games are NOT to blame
The video games nor the video game manufacturers are to blame.
Unknown to the manufacturers, there is code hidden in their games that secretly generates an undetectable signal which appears successively in each frame of the game. Exposure to this signal gradually causes the players to become aware of undetectable signals from government satellites which transform players into government controlled robots.
The proof is that these signals and the code in the games are undetectable and cannot be shown to exist.
I personally find that the best protection is to fashion your aluminum headwear using TWO layers of aluminum foil. This more than doubles the effectiveness due to a resonance effect which develops between the two layers at exactly double the frequency of the government's invisible brain lasers. (take the effectiveness of a single layer of aluminum foil and multiply by a coefficient greater than 2.0.) Furthermore, if you fashion your aluminum hat with two antennas instead of the usual one, this further increases the effectiveness by an additional 37 %.
I'm not talking crazy tin foil hat conspiracy theories here. You MUST use aluminum foil hats to protect yourself from this insidious threat in these dangerous times.
On the post: Ring Continues To Insist Its Cameras Reduce Crime, But Crime Data Doesn't Back Those Claims Up
Someday, maybe
I'll let others address the privacy implications of Ring, and that Ring hands over video to police and government behind the backs of the property owner and camera owner.
Those things ignored . . .
Someday, Ring might actually reduce crime. Today, at best, it might only deter some crime, or help catch crimes that continue to occur. This might, eventually, make crime decrease some as crooks avoid Ring infested properties.
However those crimes might simply move to other properties that are not infected with Ring.
On the post: Privacy & Encryption Will Be More Important Than Ever In Wake Of Coronavirus
Re: Re: ROT17
That would rotating 17 backward or 9 forward.
aqw hwppa
brx ixqqb
csy jyrrc
dtz kzssd
eua latte
fvb mbuuf
gwc ncvvg
hxd odwwh
iye pexxi
jzf qfyyj
kag rgzzk
lbh shaal
mci tibbm
ndj ujccn
oek vkddo
pfl wleep
qgm xmffq
rhn ynggr
sio zohhs
tjp apiit
ukq bqjju
vlr crkkv
wms dsllw
xnt etmmx
you funny
zpv gvooz
On the post: Privacy & Encryption Will Be More Important Than Ever In Wake Of Coronavirus
ROT17
We need government mandated ROT17.
"The government selected ROT17 because two applications of it will not revert the ciphertext back to plain text.", the senator explained.
"...and furthermore", the senator added, "we chose ROT17 because 17 is a prime number unlike 13."
On the post: FBI Director Chris Wray Pitches Weakened Encryption At A Cyber Security Conference
Re: Here's the thing about criminals
No need to ban guns.
What if instead we had 'weakened' guns?
On the post: Cable Sector Likely To Freak Out At New Service That Streamlines Streaming TV Password Sharing
Re:
The streaming tv industry can learn something from the cable tv industry.
People only have so much money to spend. No matter how much of their money that you want, they only have so much to give.
On the post: Cable Sector Likely To Freak Out At New Service That Streamlines Streaming TV Password Sharing
Re: Re: Profiles
Profiles will be abused. Get used to it. Profiles might actually limit how much people abuse sharing their service.
Here is a true fact.
Fact: you can only squeeze people so hard.
They only have so much money. No matter how much you think you want.
On the post: Cable Sector Likely To Freak Out At New Service That Streamlines Streaming TV Password Sharing
Profiles
Netflix got this right in the beginning.
Profiles. The ability to create separate identities for individual family members under a single billing account. That way each family member gets a personal favorites list, and personalized suggestions of junk they should watch to destroy their brain cells.
Hulu and Starz also do this.
Others seem to think that you should have to buy a separate account for each family member.
They are delusional. Kidding themselves. Living in a fantasy world unhinged from the reality of the lives of most subscribers. Most subscribers cannot simply tighten their belt by the austerity of buying one fewer luxury cars this year.
Then the streaming services are surprised when family members share a password and are unhappy about the lack of separate play lists and suggestions.
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