I haven't seen it increase significantly in the last 10 years in any but the most densely-populated metropolitan centers. Slightly smaller urban areas (not to mention anything rural) have been completely ignored. The only places in the US this is not true are those rich enough to fight monopolies and install municipal networks. The US having/average/ Gb+ speeds in 10 years is a joke.
You forget that someone controls the cameras, where they're installed, where they're aimed, and who watches them. There will never be zero privacy as you envision, because those who control the cameras will never allow the invasion of their own privacy. Eventually, the post of camera controller will be filled with the worst criminal elements, because that's where it's now safe to be a criminal.
No, they'll let private companies continue to do something they are not (publicly) allowed to do themselves. Then they'll simply buy the data using taxpayer money. This is something that's been ongoing for a long time, so it should only come as a surprise to those dipping their toe into the waters of "security" politics for the very first time.
In many places, you don't need approval from unions, but if you don't get it you have to have City Council or a Mayor with the stones to call the unions' bluff when instituting policies. Spokane, WA, could have had an independent police ombudsman's office in the wake of Officer Karl Thompson killing Otto Zehm, a mildly mentally impaired (and completely innocent of wrongdoing) man whose dying words were "I only wanted a Snickers." Unfortunately, it was put into place without any independent investigative or disciplinary powers because our political leaders didn't have the guts to tell the unions to put up or shut up.
Basically, the Ombudsman asks, "I'd like to get an account of what happened." Cops reply, "Nah, we'd rather not." Ombudsman: "Oh, okay. See you tomorrow!"
The unions said they wouldn't budge on investigative powers, and under Washington law the contract framework under which officers can be disciplined cannot be changed without the consent of the union. So the city waited until their contract was up. The union said, "No, we'd rather not." And the City Council & Mayor blinked, and deleted the provision from the new contract. Now we have to wait for the new contract to expire before getting another chance at independent oversight. Unions were great when they were fighting for humane working conditions. Now they're mostly around to protect things that should be open to competition. The places that need unions don't have them, and the places that have them don't need them. The only States where they work how they should (where unions have to balance the concessions they wring from employers with competition from local, non-union workers. Right-to-work States are where it's at, because unions can't force membership as a condition of employment. They have to provide a compelling reason for employees to join.
(And to head this stupid argument off, right-to-work does not mean "Your employer can fire you at any time without cause." Stop parroting that tired lie, because that's what's called "at-will employment," not right-to-work.)
Well, in a way it would and in a way it wouldn't. It would make business as usual harder. It would make focusing on crimes that matter easier, because you can't pressure your force to focus on a specific set of behaviors once it's no longer a crime. At least not overtly, anyway.
Then the cops who are afraid of cameras will stop applying to police academies, and cops who have nothing to fear from cameras will make up an increasingly large percentage of police forces until the bad apples become such a small minority that there aren't enough of them to pressure their betters into covering for them.
No, he pissed off politicians and their rich donors (the owners of other biotech stocks damaged by the fallout). He's the type of person they make an example out of, because he doesn't have powerful friends.
You need to upgrade your house shielding to prevent muons from wreaking havoc on the up/down quark balance in the helium-injected conductors. You do use helium-injected wiring, don't you?
The cheapest cable is frequently not even close to good enough. I've seen numerous $0.99 Chinese cables that actually have a loop of the conductor that obviously was laying flat against the side of the mold when the injection process happened. As a result, it sticks through one of the molded connector walls. Just a bit of rubbing and you've got bare conductor exposed.
SOP in the USA. SWAT is used overwhelmingly in cases they have no business being used in. A tiny, tiny minority of their deployments are actually for circumstances the teams were put together to confront (hostage & active shooter).
If they were able to distinguish those who made a conscious decision to use IE from those who did not, I'm sure there would probably be a similar correlation to the former as there is amongst those who consciously choose an alternative. Unfortunately, it's much harder to separate that class of IE user from the more numerous default users, and so they are not included in the analysis.
The same reason why chip & pin cards that do exist are only "suggestions:" It requires merchants to buy new transaction equipment. Since not all banks have moved to chip & pin (Chase is just now getting around to it), requiring new hardware just means someone will use another card when a retailer hasn't upgraded. Banks won't start requiring the new chips be utilized at the point of sale until enough retailers have upgraded. Until the threat of your merchant gateway provider cutting your ability to process credit card sales has some teeth, nobody is going to be the first to make the equipment upgrade mandatory.
Well, you don't necessarily need to use something to contain the ejection if you're using coronacidal cream properly, but the cream doesn't protect you from coronally-transmitted diseases.
Automatic weapons are terrible for accurate shot placement. Their only use is keeping heads down while people with practical weapons advance into better firing positions.
You might not "win," but there have been a number of SWAT officers killed during no-knock raids where the homeowner believed it was a home invasion. Several of those victims (the homeowners, I mean) have survived to be acquitted in court even.
Most of the Arab nations actually have massive diversified investment schemes that will allow them to continue being rich even without oil. Of course, it's easier for the smaller ones like Dubai and the UAE, but Saudi Arabia has been unhitching as many of their economy's horses from oil as they can for a long time.
Not true at all. If I witness Bob murder Tom, I know Bob murdered Tom. If, however, Bob manages to destroy all physical evidence of murdering Tom, convicting him can't be done on my word alone.
There are many cases where it is well-known that someone is a criminal, and yet they are not prosecuted for lack of admissible evidence.
That will change. Schools are verboten, but not all of them were removed when the original Ingress portals were used to seed the Pokemon Go world.
I haven't seen it increase significantly in the last 10 years in any but the most densely-populated metropolitan centers. Slightly smaller urban areas (not to mention anything rural) have been completely ignored. The only places in the US this is not true are those rich enough to fight monopolies and install municipal networks. The US having /average/ Gb+ speeds in 10 years is a joke.
You forget that someone controls the cameras, where they're installed, where they're aimed, and who watches them. There will never be zero privacy as you envision, because those who control the cameras will never allow the invasion of their own privacy. Eventually, the post of camera controller will be filled with the worst criminal elements, because that's where it's now safe to be a criminal.
No, they'll let private companies continue to do something they are not (publicly) allowed to do themselves. Then they'll simply buy the data using taxpayer money. This is something that's been ongoing for a long time, so it should only come as a surprise to those dipping their toe into the waters of "security" politics for the very first time.
They'd have to provide me compensation for the permanent space that trash takes up in my brain.
In many places, you don't need approval from unions, but if you don't get it you have to have City Council or a Mayor with the stones to call the unions' bluff when instituting policies. Spokane, WA, could have had an independent police ombudsman's office in the wake of Officer Karl Thompson killing Otto Zehm, a mildly mentally impaired (and completely innocent of wrongdoing) man whose dying words were "I only wanted a Snickers." Unfortunately, it was put into place without any independent investigative or disciplinary powers because our political leaders didn't have the guts to tell the unions to put up or shut up.
Basically, the Ombudsman asks, "I'd like to get an account of what happened."
Cops reply, "Nah, we'd rather not."
Ombudsman: "Oh, okay. See you tomorrow!"
The unions said they wouldn't budge on investigative powers, and under Washington law the contract framework under which officers can be disciplined cannot be changed without the consent of the union. So the city waited until their contract was up. The union said, "No, we'd rather not." And the City Council & Mayor blinked, and deleted the provision from the new contract. Now we have to wait for the new contract to expire before getting another chance at independent oversight. Unions were great when they were fighting for humane working conditions. Now they're mostly around to protect things that should be open to competition. The places that need unions don't have them, and the places that have them don't need them. The only States where they work how they should (where unions have to balance the concessions they wring from employers with competition from local, non-union workers. Right-to-work States are where it's at, because unions can't force membership as a condition of employment. They have to provide a compelling reason for employees to join.
(And to head this stupid argument off, right-to-work does not mean "Your employer can fire you at any time without cause." Stop parroting that tired lie, because that's what's called "at-will employment," not right-to-work.)
Well, in a way it would and in a way it wouldn't. It would make business as usual harder. It would make focusing on crimes that matter easier, because you can't pressure your force to focus on a specific set of behaviors once it's no longer a crime. At least not overtly, anyway.
Then the cops who are afraid of cameras will stop applying to police academies, and cops who have nothing to fear from cameras will make up an increasingly large percentage of police forces until the bad apples become such a small minority that there aren't enough of them to pressure their betters into covering for them.
No, he pissed off politicians and their rich donors (the owners of other biotech stocks damaged by the fallout). He's the type of person they make an example out of, because he doesn't have powerful friends.
Did we, or did they make us make them do what they did to us?
You need to upgrade your house shielding to prevent muons from wreaking havoc on the up/down quark balance in the helium-injected conductors. You do use helium-injected wiring, don't you?
The cheapest cable is frequently not even close to good enough. I've seen numerous $0.99 Chinese cables that actually have a loop of the conductor that obviously was laying flat against the side of the mold when the injection process happened. As a result, it sticks through one of the molded connector walls. Just a bit of rubbing and you've got bare conductor exposed.
SOP in the USA. SWAT is used overwhelmingly in cases they have no business being used in. A tiny, tiny minority of their deployments are actually for circumstances the teams were put together to confront (hostage & active shooter).
If they were able to distinguish those who made a conscious decision to use IE from those who did not, I'm sure there would probably be a similar correlation to the former as there is amongst those who consciously choose an alternative. Unfortunately, it's much harder to separate that class of IE user from the more numerous default users, and so they are not included in the analysis.
The same reason why chip & pin cards that do exist are only "suggestions:" It requires merchants to buy new transaction equipment. Since not all banks have moved to chip & pin (Chase is just now getting around to it), requiring new hardware just means someone will use another card when a retailer hasn't upgraded. Banks won't start requiring the new chips be utilized at the point of sale until enough retailers have upgraded. Until the threat of your merchant gateway provider cutting your ability to process credit card sales has some teeth, nobody is going to be the first to make the equipment upgrade mandatory.
Well, you don't necessarily need to use something to contain the ejection if you're using coronacidal cream properly, but the cream doesn't protect you from coronally-transmitted diseases.
Students in the US have their rights severely curtailed at school. They have no rights under the 1st, 4th, or 5th amendments.
Perhaps the writer didn't know if he was using coax or twisted pair.
The type of people who do that don't fight for anyone's rights. They fight to consolidate their own power.
Automatic weapons are terrible for accurate shot placement. Their only use is keeping heads down while people with practical weapons advance into better firing positions.
You might not "win," but there have been a number of SWAT officers killed during no-knock raids where the homeowner believed it was a home invasion. Several of those victims (the homeowners, I mean) have survived to be acquitted in court even.
Most of the Arab nations actually have massive diversified investment schemes that will allow them to continue being rich even without oil. Of course, it's easier for the smaller ones like Dubai and the UAE, but Saudi Arabia has been unhitching as many of their economy's horses from oil as they can for a long time.
Yes, but those terrorism things are SuperBad®!
Even then, you can't really be sure unless you inspected the silicon wafers yourself.
Not true at all. If I witness Bob murder Tom, I know Bob murdered Tom. If, however, Bob manages to destroy all physical evidence of murdering Tom, convicting him can't be done on my word alone.
There are many cases where it is well-known that someone is a criminal, and yet they are not prosecuted for lack of admissible evidence.