Forensics is excellent at ruling out potential suspects; think of it as an enhanced alibi. Depending on the specific evidence, often it cannot definitively prove a suspect is guilty. It often is inconclusive. As an example it is know the perpetrator has O negative blood. Anyone who has a different blood has an ironclad alibi; wrong blood type. Anyone who loosely matches the description of the perpetrator with this blood type could be the perpetrator but its inconclusive if they are.
Also, a solid case at trial does not rely on a couple of bits of forensic evidence if the DA wants a solid case. It should rely on several lines of forensic evidence that as it excludes others and only leaves the accused as the logical perpetrator. Some of the forensic evidence will be stronger, some weaker.
The problem is the tendency for the DA's office and their 'experts' to push the evidence beyond what it is capable of showing. And then essentially lying to the jury about quality of the evidence. This particularly true if there is limited evidence.
My take is there advantages for both a forms. Which is more important for a specific title will vary. Personally I get do not read many e-books preferring print over digital for most titles. For music, streaming is fine for many for general background music.
Charter is abusing credit reporting by falsely threatening to damage your credit report if you do not reactivate. Credit card companies extending an offer on an actually delinquent account is a more of a courtesy to the customer. The credit card companies are doing anything illegal while Charter is threatening to do so. These are very different actions.
I agree. I do not think most consumers are concerned about the percentage Apple, et. al. take from the price. Nor are most wanting to sideload an app. Most of the squawking about app stores come from those who want sideloading to be very easy and developers. The first do not realize the app store serves an imperfect source of apps for users. A source much better than searching the 'net for an app. The second are mostly complaining about the haircut they are taking at the store.
You can ask but since you do not own the copyright there is very little you can do. Paparazzi exist because of this point of ownership. Within broad limits (like not trespassing) they can take a photo of a celebrity and post/sell it in the US and there is very little the celebrity can do about it.
My thought is the township was looking for a legal way to harass an unpopular property owner. They needed an excuse to harass him that seemed viable. Violating zoning ordinances is a way to do this. But they forgot to check with the courts before flying a drone over the property.
Streisand Effect definitely as many would not think to use an aerial survey drone for this purpose instead of a surveyor.
As far as 1A, definitely as he is not claiming his services are legally valid surveys. He is only taking aerial photos and making various maps from those photos.
If I 'hired' a friend to do this and paid him for his time I would have the same result - photos but not a valid survey.
A major difference between using a security camera and reverse warrants. Security cameras only record a limited amount based on their location. Also they are useful for actually showing the crime, verifying/breaking alibis, etc. Reviewing the footage can be time consuming. They are not as likely to capture large numbers of innocent people in the shot and often it is pretty obvious they are innocent to someone with a couple of functioning grey cells. Depending on the camera and angles, the quality of the images may be rather grainy. But there is often enough detail to give a decent description of the perp that eliminates a large number of people. Reverse warrants in this case lump a number of phones which happened to be in the area together without any means of obviously rejecting them. The movements of each must be traced. Depending on the accuracy of the location data it will be difficult to accurately sort out quickly which phones to ignore.
An example, I live very close to several bank branches (walking distance). If there was a robbery at one of them the interior video footage would either confirm whether I was in even in the branch at the time. And the footage would confirm if I even matched the perp's description. The cell location data from tower pings might not show my location with enough accuracy for me to be eliminated if I was at home during the robbery. The risk is a false positive will lead the police to focus on an innocent person with the possibility of charging an innocent person.
Streaming services are useless without content. So if there are no games to stream or play online then the size of the server farm is irrelevant. Thus Sony and Nintendo as well as any other game producer are more direct competitors to Xbox than Google or AWS. Also, if a game is popular the content producer gets the profits, again the backend is not critical.
Now as cloud service providers hosting content, Google, AWS, and others are direct competitors. But this ignores that what the content is what is important not whose hardware it resides on.
The viewing landscape is changing with the rise of streaming services and sites like YouTube. These options have content that is not available on any cable service and are more convenient for a viewer once the content is posted. Cable cutting will continue for the near future as many review their options and viewing habits and decide cable/satellite is not worth the money.
5G will not cause the spike in sales OEMs and carriers are hoping for. The basic reason is 5G will not offer noticeable performance improvement for the common uses of the a phone. Once the performance is good enough for most they are not going to buy the latest model phone unless their old one is near death.
Phones and computers are mature products and like other mature products the majority of sales is to replace older devices. The sales will flatten out. Any growth will be from population and economic growth and not penetration into completely virgin markets.
The race for 5G is a marketing hype to make the carriers look like they are doing something.
If you have a quality brand that people know and want then harassing competitors is only free advertising for the competitors. You wonder if any has heard of the Streisand Effect. Musical instruments have a very limited range of materials, shapes, etc. because they have to be able to produce the expected sounds.
Many YouTube channels use a membership model with members getting special access or other benefits. The main content is free to the user. This is sustainable model for many channels and I would suspect many news sites. You still get traffic to see stories and you are getting dues (for lack of a better term) every month.
One of the failures of a hard paywall is many are only interested in one or two stories that are being linked to and have no interest in the other content. Subscribing to a local fish wrap when you are not a local generally makes no sense. So either you allow the views which might generate some ad revenue or miss the view altogether and get 100% of 0.
Another irritation is too many news sites demand one turns off ad-blockers or subscribe, I am not going to either. But if your content is sufficiently important to me, I might join as a member for a few bucks a month.
Personally it is rare that I go directly to a news site that does not allow comments. If there is an interesting story many times I will peruse the comments. Otherwise, on many stories, glancing at the headlines with some careful interpretation of the local Pravda will give me what I need to know. Also, in reality, most news sites just regurgitate the wire service feed so if you have seen the story anywhere you probably will not learn anything new.
Re: I stand with and believe Techdirt's reporting ..
He wrote a program I believe called 'Email'. The concept predated him by many years. In fact, the protocols for email predated his program by many years. So it was invented by others but not called 'Email'.
On the post: Letter From High-Ranking FBI Lawyer Tells Prosecutors How To Avoid Court Scrutiny Of Firearms Analysis Junk Science
Forensics
Forensics is excellent at ruling out potential suspects; think of it as an enhanced alibi. Depending on the specific evidence, often it cannot definitively prove a suspect is guilty. It often is inconclusive. As an example it is know the perpetrator has O negative blood. Anyone who has a different blood has an ironclad alibi; wrong blood type. Anyone who loosely matches the description of the perpetrator with this blood type could be the perpetrator but its inconclusive if they are.
Also, a solid case at trial does not rely on a couple of bits of forensic evidence if the DA wants a solid case. It should rely on several lines of forensic evidence that as it excludes others and only leaves the accused as the logical perpetrator. Some of the forensic evidence will be stronger, some weaker.
The problem is the tendency for the DA's office and their 'experts' to push the evidence beyond what it is capable of showing. And then essentially lying to the jury about quality of the evidence. This particularly true if there is limited evidence.
On the post: Analog Books Go From Strength To Strength: Helped, Not Hindered, By The Digital World
Physical vs Digital
My take is there advantages for both a forms. Which is more important for a specific title will vary. Personally I get do not read many e-books preferring print over digital for most titles. For music, streaming is fine for many for general background music.
On the post: US Court To Gruyere Cheese People: No, You Can't Ban People From Calling Their Cheese Gruyere If They Aren't Your Neighbors
Re:
And the difference is.... nothing.
On the post: US Court To Gruyere Cheese People: No, You Can't Ban People From Calling Their Cheese Gruyere If They Aren't Your Neighbors
A bit late
They lost the trademark by not vigilantly enforcing it is the basic ruling. Trademarks, in the US, have to be protected to maintain validity.
On the post: Charter Spectrum Threatens To Ruin Potential Customers Over Debt They Don't Owe
Re: Metastasize
Charter is abusing credit reporting by falsely threatening to damage your credit report if you do not reactivate. Credit card companies extending an offer on an actually delinquent account is a more of a courtesy to the customer. The credit card companies are doing anything illegal while Charter is threatening to do so. These are very different actions.
On the post: Stop The Antitrust Gerrymandering
Differences
How different are TikTok and Facebook? If they are sufficiently different they may legally not be competitors.
On the post: Stop The Antitrust Gerrymandering
Re: Re:
I agree. I do not think most consumers are concerned about the percentage Apple, et. al. take from the price. Nor are most wanting to sideload an app. Most of the squawking about app stores come from those who want sideloading to be very easy and developers. The first do not realize the app store serves an imperfect source of apps for users. A source much better than searching the 'net for an app. The second are mostly complaining about the haircut they are taking at the store.
On the post: Khloe Kardashian Streisands A Photo She Wanted Taken Down By Issuing Takedowns
Re: Key word: "ask"
You can ask but since you do not own the copyright there is very little you can do. Paparazzi exist because of this point of ownership. Within broad limits (like not trespassing) they can take a photo of a celebrity and post/sell it in the US and there is very little the celebrity can do about it.
On the post: State Appeals Court Says Flying A Drone Over Someone's Property Violates The Fourth Amendment
Re: Missing the underlying point
My thought is the township was looking for a legal way to harass an unpopular property owner. They needed an excuse to harass him that seemed viable. Violating zoning ordinances is a way to do this. But they forgot to check with the courts before flying a drone over the property.
On the post: Drone Operator Sues North Carolina Over Its First Amendment-Violating Surveyor Licensing Laws
Re:
Streisand Effect definitely as many would not think to use an aerial survey drone for this purpose instead of a surveyor.
As far as 1A, definitely as he is not claiming his services are legally valid surveys. He is only taking aerial photos and making various maps from those photos.
If I 'hired' a friend to do this and paid him for his time I would have the same result - photos but not a valid survey.
On the post: Facing Massive Subscriber Defections AT&T Chooses: Rate Hikes & New, Bogus Fees
When Comcast...
When you make Comcast look good you are truly horrible.
On the post: Reverse Warrant Used In Robbery Investigation Being Challenged As Unconstitutional
Re:
A major difference between using a security camera and reverse warrants. Security cameras only record a limited amount based on their location. Also they are useful for actually showing the crime, verifying/breaking alibis, etc. Reviewing the footage can be time consuming. They are not as likely to capture large numbers of innocent people in the shot and often it is pretty obvious they are innocent to someone with a couple of functioning grey cells. Depending on the camera and angles, the quality of the images may be rather grainy. But there is often enough detail to give a decent description of the perp that eliminates a large number of people. Reverse warrants in this case lump a number of phones which happened to be in the area together without any means of obviously rejecting them. The movements of each must be traced. Depending on the accuracy of the location data it will be difficult to accurately sort out quickly which phones to ignore.
An example, I live very close to several bank branches (walking distance). If there was a robbery at one of them the interior video footage would either confirm whether I was in even in the branch at the time. And the footage would confirm if I even matched the perp's description. The cell location data from tower pings might not show my location with enough accuracy for me to be eliminated if I was at home during the robbery. The risk is a false positive will lead the police to focus on an innocent person with the possibility of charging an innocent person.
On the post: Xbox Chief Says Its Main Competitors Are Now Google, Amazon Rather Than Sony, Nintendo
Idiocy Reigns
Streaming services are useless without content. So if there are no games to stream or play online then the size of the server farm is irrelevant. Thus Sony and Nintendo as well as any other game producer are more direct competitors to Xbox than Google or AWS. Also, if a game is popular the content producer gets the profits, again the backend is not critical.
Now as cloud service providers hosting content, Google, AWS, and others are direct competitors. But this ignores that what the content is what is important not whose hardware it resides on.
On the post: AT&T's Attempt To Dominate The Pay TV Sector Continues To Go...Poorly
Allen and Two Temps
The viewing landscape is changing with the rise of streaming services and sites like YouTube. These options have content that is not available on any cable service and are more convenient for a viewer once the content is posted. Cable cutting will continue for the near future as many review their options and viewing habits and decide cable/satellite is not worth the money.
On the post: The 'Race To 5G' Is A Giant Pile Of Lobbyist Nonsense
New Sales
5G will not cause the spike in sales OEMs and carriers are hoping for. The basic reason is 5G will not offer noticeable performance improvement for the common uses of the a phone. Once the performance is good enough for most they are not going to buy the latest model phone unless their old one is near death.
Phones and computers are mature products and like other mature products the majority of sales is to replace older devices. The sales will flatten out. Any growth will be from population and economic growth and not penetration into completely virgin markets.
The race for 5G is a marketing hype to make the carriers look like they are doing something.
On the post: Gibson Guitar Declares Shift In IP Enforcement After Most Recent Public Backlash
Brand
If you have a quality brand that people know and want then harassing competitors is only free advertising for the competitors. You wonder if any has heard of the Streisand Effect. Musical instruments have a very limited range of materials, shapes, etc. because they have to be able to produce the expected sounds.
On the post: The Paywall Conundrum: Even Those Who Like Paying For News Don't Pay For Much News
Subscription vs Membership
Many YouTube channels use a membership model with members getting special access or other benefits. The main content is free to the user. This is sustainable model for many channels and I would suspect many news sites. You still get traffic to see stories and you are getting dues (for lack of a better term) every month.
One of the failures of a hard paywall is many are only interested in one or two stories that are being linked to and have no interest in the other content. Subscribing to a local fish wrap when you are not a local generally makes no sense. So either you allow the views which might generate some ad revenue or miss the view altogether and get 100% of 0.
Another irritation is too many news sites demand one turns off ad-blockers or subscribe, I am not going to either. But if your content is sufficiently important to me, I might join as a member for a few bucks a month.
On the post: Virginia Prosecutor 'Reform' Efforts Include Nailing Sexting Teens With Child Porn Charges And Screwing Defense Lawyers
Has Comrade Stamos ever heard of a little thing called the Bill of Rights or the US Constitution?
On the post: Killing News Comments Only Solidified Google, Facebook Dominance
Traffic and Comments
Personally it is rare that I go directly to a news site that does not allow comments. If there is an interesting story many times I will peruse the comments. Otherwise, on many stories, glancing at the headlines with some careful interpretation of the local Pravda will give me what I need to know. Also, in reality, most news sites just regurgitate the wire service feed so if you have seen the story anywhere you probably will not learn anything new.
On the post: Our Legal Dispute With Shiva Ayyadurai Is Now Over
Re: I stand with and believe Techdirt's reporting ..
He wrote a program I believe called 'Email'. The concept predated him by many years. In fact, the protocols for email predated his program by many years. So it was invented by others but not called 'Email'.
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