1) Google employee makes sure some fake word does not exist in google or bing search results. 2) Said employee points google's cache results of that word to some random page. 3) Said employee uses Internet Explorer at his desk at Google to make the search appear in Google, then selects the only link as the correct thing he was looking for and Bing somehow acquires this information. 4) Search now appears in Bing.
Isn't this the exact process Google implements when a user searches with Chrome to determine the most relevant results? So in essence IE behavior now mimics another browsers behavior? Doesn't even sound moderately intriguing.
Interesting to see Verizon, Time Warner and Comcast all in the top five. It seemed certain there would be at least one throttling between those three. We've had our Netflix on the first two and never had a problem (yet).
Casinos can change the odds at will, banks can defraud depositors, and brokerages can make millions per microsecond trading phantom ticks. But don't you dare win at slots bitch!
It's essential to have some help from the outside during your IT admin vacation
A well thought out idea like this is exactly what it admins avoid, unfortunately.
Blizzard announces there's a beta in Q3 but not a diablo 3 release date yet. And confirms no one should expect a release date... ever?
Hey blizz, hurry up - my playstation was hacked and I'm bored!
It isn't technically stealing, it is copyright infringement.
Try explaining the difference to ICE.
So now we cant make any more SarahPorn?
1) Google employee makes sure some fake word does not exist in google or bing search results. 2) Said employee points google's cache results of that word to some random page. 3) Said employee uses Internet Explorer at his desk at Google to make the search appear in Google, then selects the only link as the correct thing he was looking for and Bing somehow acquires this information. 4) Search now appears in Bing.
Isn't this the exact process Google implements when a user searches with Chrome to determine the most relevant results? So in essence IE behavior now mimics another browsers behavior? Doesn't even sound moderately intriguing.
Interesting to see Verizon, Time Warner and Comcast all in the top five. It seemed certain there would be at least one throttling between those three. We've had our Netflix on the first two and never had a problem (yet).
We call what you do "trading", but if anyone else does it it's called "hacking". Awesome.
Casinos can change the odds at will, banks can defraud depositors, and brokerages can make millions per microsecond trading phantom ticks. But don't you dare win at slots bitch!