A small clarification: Trademark doesn't revert if it's not enforced, rather if it becomes common usage. A company doesn't need to enforce it, but that is one way to prevent it from becoming common usage.
Trump has been pro asbestos for decades (according to an article I read). He probably had to remove it from some properties he owned, and like the slumlord he is thought his tenets didn't need all that expense. So here he is, still fighting battles from decades ago.
Yeah.......you're having a bad day today. Cheer up! It's one less day until Trump's gone! Then we can remember him like we do Reagan (that is, completely hypocritically in the way that most helps ourselves).
It's OK to have the machine count the votes, but you need a paper trail. See also http://blackboxvoting.org/ball... That way you don't need to worry about making in hackable voting machines, which is hard.
I know people who've lost their private bitcoin keys. I don't know anyone who's had the records of ownership lost on their property.
So let's see if you've thought this through.....imagine I lose the crypto-key for my property. What will happen? I can't sell my property anymore (because a key would be needed for that)?
Good question. Fortunately, in this case Wikipedia has a citation. We can look at it, and it seems piracy does not have a huge impact. The biggest risk seems to be people using old, rusty ships that are no longer particularly sea-worthy.
One of the most awkward things about the triangle is, in most places on earth, when you turn, you end up going a different direction. But in the triangle you can turn 360 degrees and you are *still* going the same direction. That's why people don't understand listen people.
There's nowhere in any of the linked articles that suggests they did that (it would be very cool if they had). Instead it seems they proved that a giant wave can sink a ship. Woohoo I'll bet Nature is wishing they got the submission on that remarkable paper.
If they were scientists, they would have done basic research. At least do a statistical analysis explaining that these waves are more likely to happen near Bermuda. Even looking at Wikipedia we see:
"The number of ships and aircraft reported missing in the area was not significantly greater, proportionally speaking, than in any other part of the ocean."
and
"In a 2013 study, the World Wide Fund for Nature identified the world's 10 most dangerous waters for shipping, but the Bermuda Triangle was not among them."
Instead this looks like an advertisement for Channel 5's latest TV show. I won't be watching it.
The AIs are going out on the internet, scanning within and LinkedIn, then automatically sending emails to people. It's all before HR gets a chance to look at them.
There was a case in 2006 or so in Inyo county or Mono county where paper ballots were kept, scanned in, and put on the internet. Citizen investigators were able to look at the ballots, count them, and were able to find irregularities. It was reported here on Slashdot, but I can't find it right now.
Keeping the paper ballots is essential. There's no other way to verify that the correct vote was cast.
You're right.
A small clarification: Trademark doesn't revert if it's not enforced, rather if it becomes common usage. A company doesn't need to enforce it, but that is one way to prevent it from becoming common usage.
Trump has been pro asbestos for decades (according to an article I read). He probably had to remove it from some properties he owned, and like the slumlord he is thought his tenets didn't need all that expense. So here he is, still fighting battles from decades ago.
Yeah.......you're having a bad day today. Cheer up! It's one less day until Trump's gone! Then we can remember him like we do Reagan (that is, completely hypocritically in the way that most helps ourselves).
It's OK to have the machine count the votes, but you need a paper trail. See also http://blackboxvoting.org/ball... That way you don't need to worry about making in hackable voting machines, which is hard.
I didn't claim that.
You also need to make sure the votes are secret.
Wow, you're in a bad mood today. If you want to find the original source, do an internet search.
I know people who've lost their private bitcoin keys. I don't know anyone who's had the records of ownership lost on their property.
So let's see if you've thought this through.....imagine I lose the crypto-key for my property. What will happen? I can't sell my property anymore (because a key would be needed for that)?
Good question. Fortunately, in this case Wikipedia has a citation. We can look at it, and it seems piracy does not have a huge impact. The biggest risk seems to be people using old, rusty ships that are no longer particularly sea-worthy.
One of the most awkward things about the triangle is, in most places on earth, when you turn, you end up going a different direction. But in the triangle you can turn 360 degrees and you are *still* going the same direction. That's why people don't understand listen people.
There's nowhere in any of the linked articles that suggests they did that (it would be very cool if they had). Instead it seems they proved that a giant wave can sink a ship. Woohoo I'll bet Nature is wishing they got the submission on that remarkable paper.
"The number of ships and aircraft reported missing in the area was not significantly greater, proportionally speaking, than in any other part of the ocean."
and
"In a 2013 study, the World Wide Fund for Nature identified the world's 10 most dangerous waters for shipping, but the Bermuda Triangle was not among them."
Instead this looks like an advertisement for Channel 5's latest TV show. I won't be watching it.
And small local conflicts are decreasing, for that matter.
The AIs are going out on the internet, scanning within and LinkedIn, then automatically sending emails to people. It's all before HR gets a chance to look at them.
What happens when you lose the key? The property disappears?
There was a case in 2006 or so in Inyo county or Mono county where paper ballots were kept, scanned in, and put on the internet. Citizen investigators were able to look at the ballots, count them, and were able to find irregularities. It was reported here on Slashdot, but I can't find it right now.
Keeping the paper ballots is essential. There's no other way to verify that the correct vote was cast.
It means we haven't hit peak blockchain insanity yet, and probably won't for quite some time.
You can disagree, but you've also set up a false dichotomy fallacy. Both humans and machines can be vulnerable, that can happen.
How often do Canadian ballot counters make mistakes? If you can't answer, you have no business advocating "just do what Canada does" as a solution.
Oh yeah? What country are you from? Latvia?
I think you probably want scans of the full ballots, not just portions. In any case you want to keep the full paper ballots on hand, that's for sure.
No, i replied "Yes" to Hognoxious. The threading looks funny.
It's horrific, I admit. I just have no idea what to do about it.
Yeah good point, it should be automatic. Randomized so as to not reveal the order the ballots were received.