Yep. The only way to fix the problem is to take away the the ability of the corporations to secure the same rights as living people. (I really wish I could rack up a million parking tickets, then dissolve my name and create a new name thus dropping all illegal activity off my record with zero accountability whatsoever.)
As an ITT grad I'm sad to say that the education there is equivalent to a degree mill. And lough out loud at their "Job Services," I have to call them every week to get put back on the job e-mail list...
I predict future happiness for Americans if they can prevent the government from wasting the labors of the people under the pretense of taking care of them. -- Thomas Jefferson
I could see if this was like in a private building or someones personal area, but if your out in the open then anyone can hear you anyway. If the police have an exemption then the public should have it as well.
That $300 is only "Access to the Internet." We had to build our own transport system to trunk that up 40+ miles(as the bird flies). A point to point was looked at one time to the Westen in Seattle from our current patch panel but that was still very VERY spendy on each side and the cost wasn't worth it. The problem was still with the one backbone provider.
I pretty much represent a small ISP in rural Washington state. Bandwidth prices for us are so outrageous, $300 per mb, and this is only because there is one major seller of bandwidth in our area, NOANET. So we have to throttle types of connections, Bit-Torrent is the major one. We would love to open the net to what it should be but its just not possible with the price gouging that happens every place but the cities.
So as an ISP I'm saying we could do it if we didn't get bent over all the time for bandwidth.
The Texas Constitution
Article 1 - BILL OF RIGHTS
Section 4 - RELIGIOUS TESTS
No religious test shall ever be required as a qualification to any office, or public trust, in this State; nor shall any one be excluded from holding office on account of his religious sentiments, provided he acknowledge the existence of a Supreme Being. Good thing the real US Constitution and Bill of Rights out trumps the Texas state constitution.
The Texas Constitution
Article 1 - BILL OF RIGHTS
Section 1 - FREEDOM AND SOVEREIGNTY OF STATE
Texas is a free and independent State, subject only to the Constitution of the United States, and the maintenance of our free institutions and the perpetuity of the Union depend upon the preservation of the right of local self-government, unimpaired to all the States. Man this country is so contradictory.
Google seams to have a back end now for people to control some search stuff for their domains. I don't know if this is relevant or not but its an easy place to get Google to remove cached stuff. I recommend looking around in it and verification of a domain just includes uploading a blank file with a weird name.
The above poster is correct, both federal and state codes/laws include a clause UCC 1-308 (formerly UCC 1-207) that allows a person to reserve their rights in a contract. This can be done as previously stated by drawing a line through items you do not agree with and initialing the changes. Hope that helps.
Schools seem hell-bent on denying kids due process... at least in this case they were exposed. Sounds like he's got a big payday coming! Its more then schools nowadays, sadly we're losing all that we originally fought for.
I think we can all agree that the RIAA and MPAA are stuck in the past with obsolete marketing and values. They are ether to retarded to see where things are and where they going or they are realizing that they are the middle man that is easily replaceable via the most abundant resource we have at the moment, the Internet.
What we need is for these people to be slapped back down to the supporting role that they started out as, this is a prime example of abuse of power.
Quick pass the SOPA and blanket google with takedowns. /extremes
Here's the Boycott list.
http://judiciary.house.gov/issues/Rogue%20Websites/List%20of%20SOPA%20Supporters.pdf
Yep. The only way to fix the problem is to take away the the ability of the corporations to secure the same rights as living people. (I really wish I could rack up a million parking tickets, then dissolve my name and create a new name thus dropping all illegal activity off my record with zero accountability whatsoever.)
Considering Comcast users are using proxies to patch the problem... Comcast has a history of saying oh no we don't do that, but in actuality they do.
Here's an actual article, LESS TWITTER MORE NEWS.
http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2011/04/07/135206725/7-4-earthquake-rattles-japan-tsunami-warning-issued
As an ITT grad I'm sad to say that the education there is equivalent to a degree mill. And lough out loud at their "Job Services," I have to call them every week to get put back on the job e-mail list...
Stupid hippies ruined the Scifi channel when they renamed it something "less scary to non nerds."
Could be the key change, I mean why not.
No, I lit it on fire myself after I couldn't find jack for drivers.
That's kinda the same boat I'm in, cross roles...
Yea we have the same problem but with power spikes (lightning) and the WRT54G's actually resetting them selfs..
Very NSFW. ^^
Wow, thats a classic!
-2 to the mod who missed the reference.
I predict future happiness for Americans if they can prevent the government from wasting the labors of the people under the pretense of taking care of them. -- Thomas Jefferson
I could see if this was like in a private building or someones personal area, but if your out in the open then anyone can hear you anyway. If the police have an exemption then the public should have it as well.
That $300 is only "Access to the Internet." We had to build our own transport system to trunk that up 40+ miles(as the bird flies). A point to point was looked at one time to the Westen in Seattle from our current patch panel but that was still very VERY spendy on each side and the cost wasn't worth it. The problem was still with the one backbone provider.
I pretty much represent a small ISP in rural Washington state. Bandwidth prices for us are so outrageous, $300 per mb, and this is only because there is one major seller of bandwidth in our area, NOANET. So we have to throttle types of connections, Bit-Torrent is the major one. We would love to open the net to what it should be but its just not possible with the price gouging that happens every place but the cities.
So as an ISP I'm saying we could do it if we didn't get bent over all the time for bandwidth.
Someone moved the booth at the last second!
Google seams to have a back end now for people to control some search stuff for their domains. I don't know if this is relevant or not but its an easy place to get Google to remove cached stuff. I recommend looking around in it and verification of a domain just includes uploading a blank file with a weird name.
http://www.google.com/webmasters/sitemaps
The above poster is correct, both federal and state codes/laws include a clause UCC 1-308 (formerly UCC 1-207) that allows a person to reserve their rights in a contract. This can be done as previously stated by drawing a line through items you do not agree with and initialing the changes. Hope that helps.
Whats that make it, medfi?
Netflix
I think we can all agree that the RIAA and MPAA are stuck in the past with obsolete marketing and values. They are ether to retarded to see where things are and where they going or they are realizing that they are the middle man that is easily replaceable via the most abundant resource we have at the moment, the Internet.
/diaf
What we need is for these people to be slapped back down to the supporting role that they started out as, this is a prime example of abuse of power.
Quick sue the collage students!