But did he perform there? He was half way across the country at the time of the performance. You don't perform a movie, you show it. I'd say a hologram is just as much a movie that you show then it is a physical presence of a concert that your perform.
Laws and ordinances are all about very specific wording, just look at the recent Obamacare Supreme Court decision where they argued about a single word and what it really meant.
If only there were some type of a device that could provide unlimited communication wirelessly over a large area with only a small initial investment...
She's still there. The chairman, vice chair, and another board member resigned over this as well as an investigation into the board's spending of taxpayer money, including the trip to Italy where the butt dialing occurred.
It is amazing how much cash you have when you are not loosing 12%, 15%, or 25%, to interest on loan payments
And the only people that are paying 12%, 15%, or 25% on a loan or credit card payment are the people that have previously driven their credit into the ground and kept it there because they don't know how to maintain their finances.
If indeed you paid off all your debts 15 years ago after driving your credit into the ground and are still paying for your house, you likely have average credit. You may not have as good of a rating as you could, but you also don't have a bad unless you continued to drive it into the ground.
That's usually what an autopsy is for. It's already been announced that there wasn't any signs of foul play, obvious drug use, or known suicidal thoughts. Toxicology results usually take some time so unless the examiner finds something really quick and really obvious, they probably can't tell you yet how he died.
No. If you read the actual article, it's million, with an m. The actual article quote (emphasis added):
The most recent data available show that the military paid more than $1 billion for satellite capacity in 2011, according to GAO. That year, about $280 million worth of satellite capability was bought outside the DISA process. If the GAO is correct, then the military could have gotten that same service for about $45 million less.
News at 11: Government paid $45m more then it had to. Citizens shocked that it was only $45m.
Once in a relationship, learn to not let your eyes wander.
Or perhaps learn to be in a relationship that is built on trust and not on preventing eyes from wandering. I've been married for 15 years and my wife has no problems with me letting my eyes wander because she knows at the end of the day, I still always wander home to her in our bed, and no one else's.
I would actually be interested to know what the logic is here: the hacker clearly doesn't like AM, or they wouldn't be spoiling their rumored-IPO quite this enthusiastically, they also don't like the users they are threatening to expose; but they also appear to be really bent out of shape about AM's allegedly-dishonest-and-exploitative 'pay to purge the embarrassing traces' feature.
I'd be really surprised if the actual hacker(s) really had any moral stance one way or another. My money would be be on just pure financial greed. They see AM and it's customers as a paycheck. They see AM as a source of money and are applying pressure directly on them to pay up and/or shut down. They also pressure subscribers to pressure AM from the other side to pay up to not reveal their information.
In the end I think it will be a loss for the hackers and customers. The hackers aren't going to get their money. AM takes a PR hit but doesn't really care because they already run a website for people with questionable ethics/morality. Customers info might get released, but for the 3 people that are actually real, married, and their partner doesn't already know, the shit might hit the fan. For everyone else, no one cares. And if you're a paying subscriber to a cheating website with your own real information, you're already a fucking idiot and get what you deserve for being a dumbass.
Those 14 crashes are with 23 (or more) vehicles. And none of them have been the fault of the software. They were either being driven manually or were the fault of others.
So not only will copyright be continuously extended thanks to Mickey Mouse Protection Acts, but now creative works will be retroactive to long before their creation thanks to the Pluto Protection Acts.
If you're interested in a Reddit-like site that won't arbitrarily close your subreddit and shadowban you because they don't like what you're talking about...
...for now. However once it gains enough mass and becomes a sufficiently large enough target, then things might change. As they have with Reddit.
What I do not get is why the heck is anyone building one in "silicon valley". The costs of power, land, and cooling would seem to be very high.
Equinix is a colo. They don't care what the energy costs are as it's just passed on to the customers that want local access more than they want lower price.
That's the funny thing about words. They can have different meanings! In this case, abstracting electricity means removing/stealing electricity and is actually worded that way in the law books in the UK.
Oooo, they're awfully generous with that cap. You'd actually be able to use the full capabilities of your monthly service for a whole 16 2/3 minutes! That's too much. Surely the actual cap would be much less than that.
Ah. So you end up paying even more for a radio that ends up making your dash look like crap. Plus likely losing at least some if not a lot of other functionality since you're no longer integrated into the vehicle's CAN bus.
So how does that work when the infotainment screen is paired to your phone for the data connection? Yeah you always have the option of not pairing it and/or unplugging the antenna, but then you end up paying for something you can't fully use. And there will be a time where some or most models won't be offered without such a option.
I guess I just fail to see how data leakage relates to accuracy and protections for corporate accounting and auditing. If you had said HIPAA or PCI compliance, sure, no problem. Or even just "best practice" network security. But I don't understand how locking down https with a MITM proxy prevents Peter, Michael, and Samir from skimming off the rounded off interest.
The dot in the username of the gmail address is used to create a virtual email address. anything sent to fm.last@googlemail.com should have gone to the user that has the mail address of fm@googlemail.com. It's a feature that allows you to filter/categorize/tag/whatever your mail. I could setup fmlast.slashdot@gmail.com so that any emails that come from/. get tagged as such, while fmlast.reddit@gmail.com goes for reddit. You can do the same thing with a +.
Speaking of cherry picking, you excluded the sentence immediately following the list of sites:
After reviewing the data, it became clear that a more rigorous test was required in order to fully evaluate the effectiveness of the browser extension.
Then a little bit later they say
the presence of different testing periods reduced the comparability of the with and without-Adblock Plus data sets. Asynchronous testing was therefore rejected in favour of synchronous testing.
So they proposed a test, performed the test, and analyzed the test realizing that it wasn't adequate. And then stated that they did that. While the test ended up being questionable (and should have been questionable anyways) it sounds pretty close to a basic research to me.
All the data was from 6 weeks of testing (as you quoted) by 103 students on those websites. While it's still questionable limiting to those sites, those also are most of the most popular social media and mainstream media websites. I think a better test would have been to segment a single general-usage lab or maybe two labs with equal usage into blind groups for ALL traffic over a given period and compare results.
MITM at the gateway/proxy. This is mandated by the Sarbanes-Oxley act [wikipedia.org] in the US, and is likely imposed by US corporations in other jurisdictions.
Can you expand on that? What part of SOX specifically requires a MITM gateway/proxy for https connections?
But did he perform there? He was half way across the country at the time of the performance. You don't perform a movie, you show it. I'd say a hologram is just as much a movie that you show then it is a physical presence of a concert that your perform.
Laws and ordinances are all about very specific wording, just look at the recent Obamacare Supreme Court decision where they argued about a single word and what it really meant.
I didn't realize that the First Amendment had an exception that forfeits your right if you have a warrant for your arrest.
If only there were some type of a device that could provide unlimited communication wirelessly over a large area with only a small initial investment...
She's still there. The chairman, vice chair, and another board member resigned over this as well as an investigation into the board's spending of taxpayer money, including the trip to Italy where the butt dialing occurred.
I just went there too. You have some really sick stuff, pervert!
And the only people that are paying 12%, 15%, or 25% on a loan or credit card payment are the people that have previously driven their credit into the ground and kept it there because they don't know how to maintain their finances.
If indeed you paid off all your debts 15 years ago after driving your credit into the ground and are still paying for your house, you likely have average credit. You may not have as good of a rating as you could, but you also don't have a bad unless you continued to drive it into the ground.
I seem to quote that a lot lately too and it's about as classic.
That's usually what an autopsy is for. It's already been announced that there wasn't any signs of foul play, obvious drug use, or known suicidal thoughts. Toxicology results usually take some time so unless the examiner finds something really quick and really obvious, they probably can't tell you yet how he died.
No. If you read the actual article, it's million, with an m. The actual article quote (emphasis added):
News at 11: Government paid $45m more then it had to. Citizens shocked that it was only $45m.
Or perhaps learn to be in a relationship that is built on trust and not on preventing eyes from wandering. I've been married for 15 years and my wife has no problems with me letting my eyes wander because she knows at the end of the day, I still always wander home to her in our bed, and no one else's.
I'd be really surprised if the actual hacker(s) really had any moral stance one way or another. My money would be be on just pure financial greed. They see AM and it's customers as a paycheck. They see AM as a source of money and are applying pressure directly on them to pay up and/or shut down. They also pressure subscribers to pressure AM from the other side to pay up to not reveal their information.
In the end I think it will be a loss for the hackers and customers. The hackers aren't going to get their money. AM takes a PR hit but doesn't really care because they already run a website for people with questionable ethics/morality. Customers info might get released, but for the 3 people that are actually real, married, and their partner doesn't already know, the shit might hit the fan. For everyone else, no one cares. And if you're a paying subscriber to a cheating website with your own real information, you're already a fucking idiot and get what you deserve for being a dumbass.
Those 14 crashes are with 23 (or more) vehicles. And none of them have been the fault of the software. They were either being driven manually or were the fault of others.
So not only will copyright be continuously extended thanks to Mickey Mouse Protection Acts, but now creative works will be retroactive to long before their creation thanks to the Pluto Protection Acts.
...for now. However once it gains enough mass and becomes a sufficiently large enough target, then things might change. As they have with Reddit.
Equinix is a colo. They don't care what the energy costs are as it's just passed on to the customers that want local access more than they want lower price.
How dare the police use the actual name of the crime that was being accused.
That's the funny thing about words. They can have different meanings! In this case, abstracting electricity means removing/stealing electricity and is actually worded that way in the law books in the UK.
Oooo, they're awfully generous with that cap. You'd actually be able to use the full capabilities of your monthly service for a whole 16 2/3 minutes! That's too much. Surely the actual cap would be much less than that.
Ah. So you end up paying even more for a radio that ends up making your dash look like crap. Plus likely losing at least some if not a lot of other functionality since you're no longer integrated into the vehicle's CAN bus.
So how does that work when the infotainment screen is paired to your phone for the data connection? Yeah you always have the option of not pairing it and/or unplugging the antenna, but then you end up paying for something you can't fully use. And there will be a time where some or most models won't be offered without such a option.
Murphy's law would suggest you need n+1, where n is the number of links currently down as well as the number of links you actually have.
I guess I just fail to see how data leakage relates to accuracy and protections for corporate accounting and auditing. If you had said HIPAA or PCI compliance, sure, no problem. Or even just "best practice" network security. But I don't understand how locking down https with a MITM proxy prevents Peter, Michael, and Samir from skimming off the rounded off interest.
The dot in the username of the gmail address is used to create a virtual email address. anything sent to fm.last@googlemail.com should have gone to the user that has the mail address of fm@googlemail.com. It's a feature that allows you to filter/categorize/tag/whatever your mail. I could setup fmlast.slashdot@gmail.com so that any emails that come from /. get tagged as such, while fmlast.reddit@gmail.com goes for reddit. You can do the same thing with a +.
Speaking of cherry picking, you excluded the sentence immediately following the list of sites:
Then a little bit later they say
So they proposed a test, performed the test, and analyzed the test realizing that it wasn't adequate. And then stated that they did that. While the test ended up being questionable (and should have been questionable anyways) it sounds pretty close to a basic research to me.
All the data was from 6 weeks of testing (as you quoted) by 103 students on those websites. While it's still questionable limiting to those sites, those also are most of the most popular social media and mainstream media websites. I think a better test would have been to segment a single general-usage lab or maybe two labs with equal usage into blind groups for ALL traffic over a given period and compare results.
Can you expand on that? What part of SOX specifically requires a MITM gateway/proxy for https connections?