So, if they're targeting everyone 3 hops from a suspected terrorist, and Santa knows the location of Al Queda, then everyone who has received a present from Santa needs to be targeted. Santa is one big hop.
Well, if he's holding a hornets nest, then obviously the people are the hornets. Some may sting you and some may not. He claims it is hard to tell the bad hornets from the good hornets without more metadata. Alas, all he's doing is gripping the nest tighter and tighter, suffocating us all.
The corporation / worker model doesn't work; both players exist at a loss. A corporation cannot pay the worker more than it sells. A worker cannot pay the corporation more than he is paid. After taxes from every angle, there's nothing left to talk about.
Hated how popular news, and I thought the TD article, only mentioned if there's a possible connection to a possible terrorist. No, remember it's more like a possible connection to a possible connection to a possible connection to possible terrorist.
"...banning these nonlethal weapons leaves officers employed by schools with few options when the use of force is necessary."
That's nonsense implying a problem maintaining in the past when there were fewer weapons to choose from? Without getting in history, though, anybody working next to mental health is trained in takedowns. That includes 4'9" 105 lbs. females. Being unarmed rather places the majority of risk (still being, arguably, not much) on the staff members, which society should see as acceptible and noble, since staff risks themselves to protect the children.
That should be read "fearing for the perpetrator's safety". The cops are treated as plural in that paragraph, so if it meant the cops, it would have read "fearing for their safety".
I don't see "fear for my safety" in the article.
Someone running around the streets with his hands cuffed behind his back might hurt himself, so obviously you tase him in the face for his safety.
Because nobody spoofs MAC addresses? You want to prove it came from my secular PC, I'm going to argue that my NIC's physical identity does not agree with what was reported.
"Basically, the DOJ is saying that it can make legal arguments that only the court can see, but which the tech companies suing it cannot see. That goes against every basic concept of due process."
Well, that just goes hand in hand with one of their reasons for blanket surveillance, that due process takes too long.
On the post: Pitch Perfect Satire: NSA Intercepted Children's Letters To Santa
Santa hops like the Easter Bunny!
On the post: Four-Star General Screams At Reporter Working On Snowden Documents
Re: Re:
On the post: Ed Snowden: I'm Still Working For The NSA; They Are The Only Ones Who Don't Realize It
Re: insightful/funny/report
...because most readers can't discern what's insightful or funny without then.
On the post: DOJ Releases Some Megaupload Evidence; Actually Shows Difficulty Of Running Cloud Service
PRON!
On the post: FBI Agent: Connection Logs Show Suspect's MAC Address, So Look For Apple Hardware
Re: Re: Re: Actually, a MAC can indicate a Mac...
On the post: Keith Alexander Tells Senators He Can't Think Of Any Other Way To Keep The US Safe Other Than Bulk Metadata Collections
Hornet's nest
On the post: DailyDirt: Charity 2.0
wrong paradigm
On the post: DailyDirt: Technology Is Changing The Way We Talk Because Internetz, LOL
On the post: Teenager Pays Hundreds Of Dollars For A Picture Of An Xbox One
Judge Judy?
On the post: US Spy Satellite Logo Not At All Subtle: Octopus Enveloping The Earth
People forgot about hops.
On the post: ACLU Calls For Ban On Nonlethal Weapons In Schools After Tased Student Ends Up In Coma
Silly
That's nonsense implying a problem maintaining in the past when there were fewer weapons to choose from? Without getting in history, though, anybody working next to mental health is trained in takedowns. That includes 4'9" 105 lbs. females. Being unarmed rather places the majority of risk (still being, arguably, not much) on the staff members, which society should see as acceptible and noble, since staff risks themselves to protect the children.
On the post: Sandy Hook Video Game Prompts Everyone To Get Everything Wrong
Fashion statement.
On the post: LG Smart TV Caught Collecting Data On Files Stored On Connected USB Drives
Great excuse!
On the post: Cop Shoots Cuffed Teen In The Face With A Taser, Claims He 'Feared For His Safety' [UPDATED]
HIS safety
That should be read "fearing for the perpetrator's safety". The cops are treated as plural in that paragraph, so if it meant the cops, it would have read "fearing for their safety".
I don't see "fear for my safety" in the article.
Someone running around the streets with his hands cuffed behind his back might hurt himself, so obviously you tase him in the face for his safety.
On the post: DailyDirt: Ads Are Content... And Should Be Shareable
Other factors
On the post: FBI Stops Responding To The Most Prolific FOIA Filer, Because He Might Actually Learn Something
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
On the post: FBI Stops Responding To The Most Prolific FOIA Filer, Because He Might Actually Learn Something
Re: Re: Re:
http://www.salon.com/2013/08/22/according_to_the_dictionary_literally_now_also_means_fi guratively_newscred/
Webster’s second definition of literally is, “in effect; virtually.”
On the post: Divine Approval: That Time When The Vatican Pirated Video Games
O RLY?
...if I had a secular PC.
On the post: Education Through Games, Or How SimCity Finally Became Useful
FALSE FLAG
On the post: DOJ Refuses To Let Tech Companies See Legal Arguments It's Making Against Them
Done with due process
Well, that just goes hand in hand with one of their reasons for blanket surveillance, that due process takes too long.
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