That certainly was the case with Nixon. He didn't do any more than what Kennedy did to him ten years earlier, but the press loved Kennedy and hated Nixon.
Yup, I didn't RTFA. Also, whoever wrote that article called it "profit" in one place and "industry share" somewhere else.
Reading more closely it appears that neither the 75% nor 30% are a share of profit though. They're the companies' the share of industry wide operating income, which has little to do with profit anyway.
Unattended voting booths have two major problems, fraud and failure.
Attended voting booths do nothing to stop fraud. Democrats have blocked every law that requires a person have some form of identification at the polling place. They also point out the the level of fraud detected is very low. Ever stop to wonder why they don't want a process which would detect fraud?
a move made possible by fewer and shorter sentences for drug offenses,
The linked article does mention reduced sentences for drug related crimes. But it also makes it clear that drug related crime is a very minor factor in the decision to get away from private prisons.
Where did I point out that he didn't steal the code? He admitted that he stole the manual, and now the code which goes with the manual turns up. How obvious does it have to be that he took the code at the same time he took the manual.
What they found is that what they use to track the software is ask over the new leak.
I have no idea what you meant there.
But if you had read the article you would see the direct connection to the documents Snowden admits he stole and the code that ShadowBrokers is trying to sell today. His leak didn't "reference" a manual, it was the manual. The code existed before he headed to Russia.
The evidence that ties the ShadowBrokers dump to the NSA comes in an agency manual for implanting malware, classified top secret, provided by Snowden, and not previously available to the public. The draft manual instructs NSA operators to track their use of one malware program using a specific 16-character string, “ace02468bdf13579.” That exact same string appears throughout the ShadowBrokers leak in code associated with the same program, SECONDDATE.
They always throw in a mix of obvious things that are already happening and a few long shots. That way they can point to their awesome ability to get so many right, and occasionally they even guess correctly on something unexpected.
On July 5, 2016, KrebsOnSecurity reached out to Bellevue, Wash., based Eddie Bauer after hearing from several sources who work in fighting fraud at U.S. financial institutions. All of those sources said they’d identified a pattern of fraud on customer cards that had just one thing in common: They were all recently used at some of Eddie Bauer’s 350+ locations the U.S. The sources said the fraud appeared to stretch back to at least January 2016.
How is it that the article says they did detect a pattern but you didn't notice it? Surely you read the article before posting a question like that.
An old timer told me of a time he saw a ship carrying bundles of lumber torpedoed during World War II. The spilled fuel caused firenados where the floating bundles of lumber wicked it up. When they went back the next morning to search for survivors there was very little oil left floating on the water. Maybe it happened, maybe it's just an old war story.
Gosh, you'd think the engineers who have been doing this for decades would have thought of using small diameter turbines that work well in high speed flows, instead of designing huge turbine blades that are the most efficient in winds found close to the surface.
"The World Bank, which keeps the poverty data, has for a long time considered anyone who is poor to be someone who lives on below $1 a day,"...
"For social welfare programmes, some of which already use satellite imagery to identify eligible recipients, higher-fidelity estimates of poverty can help to ensure that resources get to those with the greatest need."
Visit a Third World country some time, it will open your eyes. They're not talking about a small segment of the population living under bridges. They're talking about everyone in the village having nothing - no food, no housing, no water, nothing.
That certainly was the case with Nixon. He didn't do any more than what Kennedy did to him ten years earlier, but the press loved Kennedy and hated Nixon.
Yup, I didn't RTFA. Also, whoever wrote that article called it "profit" in one place and "industry share" somewhere else.
Reading more closely it appears that neither the 75% nor 30% are a share of profit though. They're the companies' the share of industry wide operating income, which has little to do with profit anyway.
75% of profit.
30% of market share.
that is not the American Way
Nor is it the European Way. Or the Asian Way. Or anywhere else.
Taxi's potentially compete with Uber (and Town Cars), but Uber (and Town Cars) does not compete with ad hoc taxi service.
The person called Uber instead of a taxi. You don't call that competing?
Uber drivers are not sharing a ride, they're offering an alternative to taxis; that's competing.
Unattended voting booths have two major problems, fraud and failure.
Attended voting booths do nothing to stop fraud. Democrats have blocked every law that requires a person have some form of identification at the polling place. They also point out the the level of fraud detected is very low. Ever stop to wonder why they don't want a process which would detect fraud?
a move made possible by fewer and shorter sentences for drug offenses,
The linked article does mention reduced sentences for drug related crimes. But it also makes it clear that drug related crime is a very minor factor in the decision to get away from private prisons.
"Once an inspiring effort at transparency, WikiLeaks now seems more driven by personal grudges and reckless releases of information..."
Wikileaks was always about embarrassing people.
Perhaps the backpack looks enough like a pouch that McDonald's would be interested?
Look at the core hours: 10-2 when the kids are in school. This is obviously an attempt to improve their gender equality numbers.
Good idea if it works for them though.
That's been pretty much disproved. The real culprits seem to be flour and sugar. Enjoy your vegetarian diet.
You're assuming the code and the manual that went with it were taken in separate attacks? Why would you assume that?
Where did I point out that he didn't steal the code? He admitted that he stole the manual, and now the code which goes with the manual turns up. How obvious does it have to be that he took the code at the same time he took the manual.
I don't understand that lawsuit.
The drivers signed on as independent contractors, then complained because they were paid as independent contractors.
And they complain because the tip is built into the fare, but they don't get a tip.
Now they'll complain because they're being replaced
What they found is that what they use to track the software is ask over the new leak.
I have no idea what you meant there.
But if you had read the article you would see the direct connection to the documents Snowden admits he stole and the code that ShadowBrokers is trying to sell today. His leak didn't "reference" a manual, it was the manual. The code existed before he headed to Russia.
The evidence that ties the ShadowBrokers dump to the NSA comes in an agency manual for implanting malware, classified top secret, provided by Snowden, and not previously available to the public. The draft manual instructs NSA operators to track their use of one malware program using a specific 16-character string, “ace02468bdf13579.” That exact same string appears throughout the ShadowBrokers leak in code associated with the same program, SECONDDATE.
So Snowden stole some software along with the other documents. No surprise. Nor is it a surprise that he's cashing in on it now.
They always throw in a mix of obvious things that are already happening and a few long shots. That way they can point to their awesome ability to get so many right, and occasionally they even guess correctly on something unexpected.
essentially get solar on their roofs for almost nothing.
No, they get solar on their roof by forcing someone else to pay for it. Subsidies don't reduce the cost - they just move it around.
Sure, so long as they're subsidized enough they can be installed. That doesn't mean they're a good idea.
I'll go out on a limb and say satellite imagery isn't going to make any of those more effective.
What they're trying to make more effective is the UN's control of resources. Whether the UN uses those resources effectively is a separate issue.
On July 5, 2016, KrebsOnSecurity reached out to Bellevue, Wash., based Eddie Bauer after hearing from several sources who work in fighting fraud at U.S. financial institutions. All of those sources said they’d identified a pattern of fraud on customer cards that had just one thing in common: They were all recently used at some of Eddie Bauer’s 350+ locations the U.S. The sources said the fraud appeared to stretch back to at least January 2016.
How is it that the article says they did detect a pattern but you didn't notice it? Surely you read the article before posting a question like that.
An old timer told me of a time he saw a ship carrying bundles of lumber torpedoed during World War II. The spilled fuel caused firenados where the floating bundles of lumber wicked it up. When they went back the next morning to search for survivors there was very little oil left floating on the water. Maybe it happened, maybe it's just an old war story.
Gosh, you'd think the engineers who have been doing this for decades would have thought of using small diameter turbines that work well in high speed flows, instead of designing huge turbine blades that are the most efficient in winds found close to the surface.
Especially if it can be seen from one of the Kennedy's beachfront mansions.
"The World Bank, which keeps the poverty data, has for a long time considered anyone who is poor to be someone who lives on below $1 a day,"...
"For social welfare programmes, some of which already use satellite imagery to identify eligible recipients, higher-fidelity estimates of poverty can help to ensure that resources get to those with the greatest need."
Visit a Third World country some time, it will open your eyes. They're not talking about a small segment of the population living under bridges. They're talking about everyone in the village having nothing - no food, no housing, no water, nothing.