In fact, net neutrality rules as they stand now HELP ISPs. They can now legally charge for some data, and give other data a free pass. This is supposed to be what net neutrality was to put an end to. Instead, it made it legal.
Yikes! I know you're in the tank for Clinton, but don't lie about it. Google very definitely is twisting the autocomplete results, and you can easily check it for yourself.
We should not spread information that can be helpful to terrorists. That's why I'm not reporting my income to the IRS anymore. I'm not sure how, but it could be useful to terrorists.
Hey guys, I just patented adenine. It's one of the building blocks of DNA. So if anyone is using DNA on their job, in school, or as part of the chemical makeup of your body, you owe me money.
Specifically, he should have kept this part under wraps:
According to the leaked documents in Spiegel, NSA officials acknowledged that any disclosure of the existence of the foreign listening posts would lead to “grave damage” for US relations with other governments.
Such posts exist in 19 European cities, including Paris, Madrid, Rome and Frankfurt, according to the magazine, which has based its reports on documents provided by Edward Snowden, the former NSA contractor.
I was not a single act though, Uriel-238. It was multiple acts. Hundreds, in fact. If he would have stopped short of giving the evidence about other countries and specific world leaders that they were being spied upon, he would still be a full-blown hero. But he didn't, so he's not.
This is the first time I agree with Holder. Snowden did a good thing in letting Americans know that our government was spying on us. Then he did a treasonous thing by explaining to other governments who and how they were being spied upon.
It's like saving a drowning lady, and then shooting someone in the face. You're a hero that needs to go to jail.
Just fyi, if you disable javascript on these anti-adblock sites (via noscript or yesscript, for example), you don't get the annoying complaint from them.
"I'm not sure people are going to be more comforted that people are carrying guns they can't see..."
You mean 'concealed carry'? That's the only way most state licenses work. It's a new thing to allow it to be open. And yes, people are comforted either way.
I think we should have some sort of 'super key' that makes all encrypted information immediately readable. Also, I think I should be the only person with that key.
On the post: Trump Still Falsely Taking Credit For Sprint Jobs He Had Nothing To Do With
On the post: Comcast Admits Net Neutrality Rules Had No Real Impact On The Company
On the post: VP Elect Mike Pence Goes To Court To Keep His Emails Secret
On the post: Facebook's Arbitrary Offensiveness Police Take Down Informational Video About Breast Cancer Screening
On the post: Donald Trump Happily Repeating Lie About Google Autocomplete Suppressing Negative Hillary News
On the post: Police Claim They Arrested Man Who Burnt American Flag Because Of Threats He Received
I can' understand wanting to kill someone with violence, but wanting to kill someone with death seems too harsh.
On the post: Appeals Court Rejects Revenge Pornster's Appeal; Another Bad Section 230 Ruling
Oh wait, nevermind. Safe search was on. Problem solved.
On the post: Judge Says FBI Can Hack Computers Without A Warrant Because Computer Users Get Hacked All The Time
Quid Pro Quo?
On the post: Customs Agents, Local Doctor Subject 18-Year-Old To Vaginal, Rectal Probing In Search Of Nonexistent Drugs
Sounds horrible, but...
On the post: Baltimore Transit Officials Won't Release Footage Of Freddie Gray Protests Because Everything Is Always About 'Terrorism'
I agree with them
On the post: Myriad Genetics Refuses To Accept That People Have A Right To Access Their Own DNA Sequences
On the post: Company Sues Customer For $1 Million, Claiming Yelp Review Was 'Defamatory,' Violated Non-Disparagement Clause
On the post: If, As Eric Holder Now Admits, Snowden Did 'A Public Service,' Why Does He Still Want Him In Jail?
Re: Re: Re: First agreement ever
On the post: If, As Eric Holder Now Admits, Snowden Did 'A Public Service,' Why Does He Still Want Him In Jail?
Re: Re: First agreement ever
On the post: If, As Eric Holder Now Admits, Snowden Did 'A Public Service,' Why Does He Still Want Him In Jail?
First agreement ever
It's like saving a drowning lady, and then shooting someone in the face. You're a hero that needs to go to jail.
On the post: Reddit's Technology Subreddit Ponders Banning Wired & Forbes For Blocking Adblock Users
noscript
On the post: Startup Offers Citizens More Opportunities To Get Shot By/Have Their Smartphones Seized By Law Enforcement
?
You mean 'concealed carry'? That's the only way most state licenses work. It's a new thing to allow it to be open. And yes, people are comforted either way.
On the post: Congressman Wants To Make Attacking A Cop A Federal 'Hate' Crime
On the post: What Our Supporters Are Saying About Techdirt's Coverage Of Encryption
front door
On the post: Former DHS Secretary Says We Can Make Airports Safer From Terrorists By Rearranging Security Checkpoints
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