The 1st Amendment of the US Constitution just keeps the government from censoring your speech. Since social media is not the government, they can do whatever they want: allowing you to speak unfettered, closing your account, censoring what you say. There's NOTHING illegal or wrong about that; it's only a problem when the government starts censoring your speech.
I certainly believe that she was treated unfairly, but if she returned after recovery to work on the same broken machine, why did she believe that things would end differently, that she would not be injured in the same manner again? Even if she were just not smart enough to know any better, her supervisor would seem to me to be criminally negligent in not having a machine repaired that injured her before and then returning her to that machine. And by "criminally negligent", I mean that he knowingly placed her in a situation that he knew world harm her.
My boss was an asshole, setting unrealistic goals rather than negotiating them, then providing no support to achieve them. His favorite motivational advice was "You figure it out.". I went to work for a competitor with a 50% raise. He fired the next two people who took my old job until his boss figured things out and fired him. I learned a lot from him about how to not treat employees and coworkers.
Once again, a company that is supposed to protect sensitive personal information fails to provide available security measures and exposes sensitive personal information to a host of bad actors. This kind of neglect usually is not at the IT level, but all the way at the top.
I would pay it only as an excuse to show off how much money I had, that the $700 cost was insignificant to me. In essence a digital license plate would be an asshole alert. Expect to see many of them on Corvettes driven by gray-haired old men.
I wish I could get to a command line prompt, nevermind a GUI, when using systemd/GNU/Linux. Too often I've experienced a systemd/GNU/Linux installation failing to boot fully because systemd screwed up in some obscure and dumb way. It doesn't matter how good you are at using the command line if the systemd/GNU/Linux installation can't even reliably get that far in the boot process!
I've never gad that experience with systemd installing Mageia6. What distro are you using?
Of course it could. That's how Free Speech works.
The 1st Amendment of the US Constitution just keeps the government from censoring your speech. Since social media is not the government, they can do whatever they want: allowing you to speak unfettered, closing your account, censoring what you say. There's NOTHING illegal or wrong about that; it's only a problem when the government starts censoring your speech.
My favorite phone was the HTC OneMAX.
Its only drawback was that it required a daily charging. Miss that and you were screwed.
Maybe Microsoft can get rid of JavScript . . .
Our Patching is Simple, Regular, and Consistently Buggy, Says Microsoft.
It seems it's a feature. . . .
Be a shame if something upgraded it . . .
What could possibly go wrong . . . ?
I certainly believe that she was treated unfairly, but if she returned after recovery to work on the same broken machine, why did she believe that things would end differently, that she would not be injured in the same manner again? Even if she were just not smart enough to know any better, her supervisor would seem to me to be criminally negligent in not having a machine repaired that injured her before and then returning her to that machine. And by "criminally negligent", I mean that he knowingly placed her in a situation that he knew world harm her.
Something does not seem right here.
It would be nice if they could re-invent the Internet . . .
My boss was an asshole, setting unrealistic goals rather than negotiating them, then providing no support to achieve them. His favorite motivational advice was "You figure it out.". I went to work for a competitor with a 50% raise. He fired the next two people who took my old job until his boss figured things out and fired him. I learned a lot from him about how to not treat employees and coworkers.
If it identified congressmen as criminals, it got it right.
Always examine the hidden agenda.
"You can trust us. We're the Government and we're just here to help you."
Once again, a company that is supposed to protect sensitive personal information fails to provide available security measures and exposes sensitive personal information to a host of bad actors. This kind of neglect usually is not at the IT level, but all the way at the top.
When they release an updated version of this, I will return to HTC. That was the best damn phone I have ever had.
I would pay it only as an excuse to show off how much money I had, that the $700 cost was insignificant to me. In essence a digital license plate would be an asshole alert. Expect to see many of them on Corvettes driven by gray-haired old men.
Who did not see this coming . . .
I wish I could get to a command line prompt, nevermind a GUI, when using systemd/GNU/Linux. Too often I've experienced a systemd/GNU/Linux installation failing to boot fully because systemd screwed up in some obscure and dumb way. It doesn't matter how good you are at using the command line if the systemd/GNU/Linux installation can't even reliably get that far in the boot process!
I've never gad that experience with systemd installing Mageia6. What distro are you using?
Like the Zune?
What is the underlying problem for these data breaches? Sloppy admins? Inadequate management? Lack of funding to do the job properly?
"The Enterprise is ready, sir." -- Scotty
He's watching re-runs for a while . . .
"But . . . what if they were?"
Marketing committee discussion, probably.
Who wins the Assault test?
GTFO LOL