Everyone is funneling what you look at into a shared DB based on your IP address. It has nothing to do with where you are logged in or not. Amazon or Google or whoever.
There is AI to monitor switched addresses and multiple devices, but it all goes to the same analysis. These sites then sign up with one of the big companies and feed tailored ads to you
Even porn sites. Especially porn sites. Gay, horses, Barely Legal.
If, like South Park prognosticated, this giant db was ever leaked...
Millenial is a generation. Yuppie is a concept -- Young, Upwardly-Mobile (climbing the corporate ladder of power and wealth) Professionals.
That's shifted somewhat and needs a spawn for the new startup culture. Young, Avaricious Startup Spawner Hawkers of Low Expectation of Success, or Yassholes.
Congress can reverse any regulation at whim. Haha they won't because theh are largely cowards.
But there was a recent case where someone tried to stop such an action by Congress claiming they didn't follow some regulatory administrative procedures, and the court slapped it right down because Congress doesn't have to.
Congress hadn't envisioned such a massive chunk of the economy to be pulled under regulatory control when it didn't exist at the time.
That's all some ask, regardless of the proposed value of the control. Regulators should not do it without express Congressional instruction.
Having said that, Congress has gotten its wish to hide from the political fallout of such things by turning all lawmaking over to the executive branch.
They do very little other than hide political favors in giant omnibus bills for millionths of a penny on the dollar.
Many of the same people continue to be upset by it, even if we enjoy the laments by some who liked it under Obama in the shoe is on the other foot aspect of it.
It is impressive all the more because it is neither a government-guaranteed monopoly nor a pseudo monopoly -- they have a slice, large, but not even majority of a market they mostly created.
It is built by offering a great product with cachet, and free people choose to buy it over many others.
More than a few have lamented the uncounted trillions spent by government trying to make sure every person can handle consumer math before theu drop out, when a fraction of that, spent on schools for the gifted, would yield incalcuable benefit to the nation as a whole -- including the consumer math strugglers.
1. Find out how various disinfectants work at the cellular level. 2. Select 3 or 4 different ones that are otherwise fairly safe, but that operate in very different ways. 3. Mix them into a new product. 4. Use it.
See, simultaneous adaptation across multiple (say, four) different sterilization vectors (this would work for internal antibiotics too) is like throwing down four poles onto an adaptation space and hope they all form an octopus x on the same point.
Invent a new, use until it doesn't work, repeat, is a failure mode. You are literally doing the best optimal way to make germ killers be useless as fast as possible.
and microsecond trading, and all the illicit actions of the large financial institutes that rig the markets and act as giant pumps that suck up foreign capital and embed into the U.S.? Why are we not indicting those people?
Dear Rooskie troll,
Rich people, especially the powerful elites in many corrupt places around the world, invest in the US because it's a safe, stable place. Unlike their own countries, with unstable money nobody but the captured citizens want, and is at risk of being stolen by the inevitable new corrupt elite. So keep it in a stable currency in a stable nation.
Why do you think US sanctions on Putin's pals hurts so much? It's just on their money...over here.
Everything you need to know about this calculation is summed up in the infographic. To maximize the time until Earth Overshoot day, we should all live like people in Cuba, Columbia, Jamaica, and Vietnam.
Jokes about the US population voting to live more like Jamaicans aside, resource shortages are irrelevant in an economically free society because free people solve issues faster than they become serious, leading to ever-cheaper resources. Even of limited ones and "low hanging fruit", thanks to substitutions and further invention.
E.g. Peak Oil. Well, here's giant oil rigs. No, let's replace them with big computer-stabilized robot ships that can sink drills through two miles of water, then drill down another mile, then make a right turn and drill two more miles. No, let's take a lot of load off with natural gas from fracking, and shale oil, a "high hanging fruit" now cheaper than low hanging fruit used to be.
There's a reason they are sneaking in pollution, which has nothing to do with it -- the panic has literally been disproven over and over again all last century, and this.
Oh, by the way. The most industrious and free societies are the only ones who can afford the pollution controls necessary to keep the environment becoming cleaner and cleaner without poverty, which is nobody's friend.
if they buy a smartphone, so they have to be happy with pre-loaded apps such as games and dictionaries,"
"...and government monitoring software."
"That's a lie!" said the government minder. "Warrentless metadata gathering allowing us to track suspected resistance people to flesh out their contact networks is sufficient!"
"I heartily agree. I wish I had this 250 years ago," said old King George III of England.
Congress could solve this simply by refusing to guarantee loans for students at universities that increase tuition more than 2% for 10 years, then the rate of inflation after that.
The can also do a similar thing but mandate the number of sinecure positions be reduced by 1% a year until it reaches no more than, say, 10% or professional positions, rather than >50% at some of the more bloated schools.
At the end of the day it's driven by easy loans. People wince at adding a $2000 radio to their car, but add $20/month to a car loan, sign me up!
10% increases per year just adds a little to your loan. There is no magic or mystery here. Colleges are like slick smarmy car salesmen.
Congress can fix by denying loan guarantees to colleges that increase fees by more than 2% a year.
Read up on the history of that phrase. It is far from the rhetorical slam dunk you think it is -- in the words of the guy who said it, a year later. It was used to justify outlawing pamphlets urging people to resist the WWI draft using legal means.
In any case, you mean falsely yelling fire to create a dangerous stampede. That is not the same thing as truthful speech that, in rare cases, may be misused.
A lot of his authoritarianism, like creative, expansive use of the regulatory power granted the executive by a cowardly, supine Congress who did not want to risk direct votes on anything that threw people into jail or took their money, you'd cheer in other contexts, read: a president you liked.
Come on over to the dark side, and oppose it in all contexts (which you now know how to interpret.)
Everyone is funneling what you look at into a shared DB based on your IP address. It has nothing to do with where you are logged in or not. Amazon or Google or whoever.
There is AI to monitor switched addresses and multiple devices, but it all goes to the same analysis. These sites then sign up with one of the big companies and feed tailored ads to you
Even porn sites. Especially porn sites. Gay, horses, Barely Legal.
If, like South Park prognosticated, this giant db was ever leaked...
Millenial is a generation. Yuppie is a concept -- Young, Upwardly-Mobile (climbing the corporate ladder of power and wealth) Professionals.
That's shifted somewhat and needs a spawn for the new startup culture. Young, Avaricious Startup Spawner Hawkers of Low Expectation of Success, or Yassholes.
Use of a comma that is so bad that, Oxford-wise, it isn't even wrong.
Congress can reverse any regulation at whim. Haha they won't because theh are largely cowards.
But there was a recent case where someone tried to stop such an action by Congress claiming they didn't follow some regulatory administrative procedures, and the court slapped it right down because Congress doesn't have to.
Congress hadn't envisioned such a massive chunk of the economy to be pulled under regulatory control when it didn't exist at the time.
That's all some ask, regardless of the proposed value of the control. Regulators should not do it without express Congressional instruction.
Having said that, Congress has gotten its wish to hide from the political fallout of such things by turning all lawmaking over to the executive branch.
They do very little other than hide political favors in giant omnibus bills for millionths of a penny on the dollar.
Many of the same people continue to be upset by it, even if we enjoy the laments by some who liked it under Obama in the shoe is on the other foot aspect of it.
It is impressive all the more because it is neither a government-guaranteed monopoly nor a pseudo monopoly -- they have a slice, large, but not even majority of a market they mostly created.
It is built by offering a great product with cachet, and free people choose to buy it over many others.
They deserve every penny of valuation.
The monetary benefit is we no longer have to behave as if a cosmology created by nomadic savages thousands of years ago is the truth.
It's his money; he can do what he wants.
More than a few have lamented the uncounted trillions spent by government trying to make sure every person can handle consumer math before theu drop out, when a fraction of that, spent on schools for the gifted, would yield incalcuable benefit to the nation as a whole -- including the consumer math strugglers.
But you know, elites and all.
Whatever's not done already:
1. Find out how various disinfectants work at the cellular level.
2. Select 3 or 4 different ones that are otherwise fairly safe, but that operate in very different ways.
3. Mix them into a new product.
4. Use it.
See, simultaneous adaptation across multiple (say, four) different sterilization vectors (this would work for internal antibiotics too) is like throwing down four poles onto an adaptation space and hope they all form an octopus x on the same point.
Invent a new, use until it doesn't work, repeat, is a failure mode. You are literally doing the best optimal way to make germ killers be useless as fast as possible.
and microsecond trading, and all the illicit actions of the large financial institutes that rig the markets and act as giant pumps that suck up foreign capital and embed into the U.S.? Why are we not indicting those people?
Dear Rooskie troll,
Rich people, especially the powerful elites in many corrupt places around the world, invest in the US because it's a safe, stable place. Unlike their own countries, with unstable money nobody but the captured citizens want, and is at risk of being stolen by the inevitable new corrupt elite. So keep it in a stable currency in a stable nation.
Why do you think US sanctions on Putin's pals hurts so much? It's just on their money...over here.
Everything you need to know about this calculation is summed up in the infographic. To maximize the time until Earth Overshoot day, we should all live like people in Cuba, Columbia, Jamaica, and Vietnam.
Jokes about the US population voting to live more like Jamaicans aside, resource shortages are irrelevant in an economically free society because free people solve issues faster than they become serious, leading to ever-cheaper resources. Even of limited ones and "low hanging fruit", thanks to substitutions and further invention.
E.g. Peak Oil. Well, here's giant oil rigs. No, let's replace them with big computer-stabilized robot ships that can sink drills through two miles of water, then drill down another mile, then make a right turn and drill two more miles. No, let's take a lot of load off with natural gas from fracking, and shale oil, a "high hanging fruit" now cheaper than low hanging fruit used to be.
There's a reason they are sneaking in pollution, which has nothing to do with it -- the panic has literally been disproven over and over again all last century, and this.
Oh, by the way. The most industrious and free societies are the only ones who can afford the pollution controls necessary to keep the environment becoming cleaner and cleaner without poverty, which is nobody's friend.
if they buy a smartphone, so they have to be happy with pre-loaded apps such as games and dictionaries,"
"...and government monitoring software."
"That's a lie!" said the government minder. "Warrentless metadata gathering allowing us to track suspected resistance people to flesh out their contact networks is sufficient!"
"I heartily agree. I wish I had this 250 years ago," said old King George III of England.
1 in 6 workers in Europe is on public dole, most for stress or lower back problems, both notoriously difficult to actually prove.
Also bleat about Kavenaugh, so don't rule that out as a driving force for this story at this moment.
Cowsoys in Cowsoyistan.
The one sound effect in Trek I hate though is the beyooooop of a ship flying by in TMP era thru Voyager, also of a ship leaving by warp.
The quiet shush of TOS was no great thing, but it was better than that. The current sounds are like something a kid might make.
Congress could solve this simply by refusing to guarantee loans for students at universities that increase tuition more than 2% for 10 years, then the rate of inflation after that.
The can also do a similar thing but mandate the number of sinecure positions be reduced by 1% a year until it reaches no more than, say, 10% or professional positions, rather than >50% at some of the more bloated schools.
At the end of the day it's driven by easy loans. People wince at adding a $2000 radio to their car, but add $20/month to a car loan, sign me up!
10% increases per year just adds a little to your loan. There is no magic or mystery here. Colleges are like slick smarmy car salesmen.
Congress can fix by denying loan guarantees to colleges that increase fees by more than 2% a year.
Read up on the history of that phrase. It is far from the rhetorical slam dunk you think it is -- in the words of the guy who said it, a year later. It was used to justify outlawing pamphlets urging people to resist the WWI draft using legal means.
In any case, you mean falsely yelling fire to create a dangerous stampede. That is not the same thing as truthful speech that, in rare cases, may be misused.
A lot of his authoritarianism, like creative, expansive use of the regulatory power granted the executive by a cowardly, supine Congress who did not want to risk direct votes on anything that threw people into jail or took their money, you'd cheer in other contexts, read: a president you liked.
Come on over to the dark side, and oppose it in all contexts (which you now know how to interpret.)
They also have the rest of Europe and the US to fall back on to bolster the populace.
Still, it's good to grant the government as few tools a dictator uses as possible, to stave off group collapse over the decades.
What history there is for democracy, or even just true legislative control, doesn't give one much hope beyond a few hundreds of years.
Most of Europe is still sub-100.
You are foolish to presume this amount of time is a statistically reliable indicator of long-term stability.
The beefed up presence could have had an effect.
8000 km/s for star is mind boggling. To accellerate a star even a tiny bit uses phenomenal amounts of energy.
Add $500 billion in tarriffs if China retaliates against US airlines, combined with tit-for-tat x10 to Chinese airline dealings in the US.
And "injuns" have the exact same patent rights as everyone else. Not less, as the GP troll suggests, and not more, as the court ruling states.
Go back to Europe/Asia/Africa. You're not real american.
Putin Russia troll caught with his pants down.