I have no idea why you think they are thinking with any kind of common sense? Bush was thinking when he ordered the invasion of Iraq. What happened is that this is an election year, and the GOP has had nothing but trouble with the DOJ in the past 18 months. This would only serve as a source of more folly for politicians in the GOP who wish to be elected this year. The puppet masters told Bush to let/make this happen so that things don't get to out of kilter for the elections. Copyright cops would be the sound bite to really get the youth vote out to the polls this election, and who would win then? Who?
More to the point, the world is full of sheeple, they want someone to figure out what their world model should be so they don't have to do all that thinking. The cognitive dissonance resulting from that causes thinking, and thinking just won't do. The end result is that religious folk tend to be dogmatic about their beliefs because to doubt their beliefs causes more dissonance and thinking than it is worth to them. Simple. Sad. True
Am I the only one that noticed Hey, they can only have one baby, but we'll give them 3 IP addresses? Sounds like the Chinese government is getting liberal or something
I disagree with you. Not about the false positives. Were it worth the effort, I'd wager that I could plan, and execute bad actions with less stress to show than someone worried about making a connecting flight.
Remember, if you will, the single explosion (point of terrorism) is most of what we've seen. Should they decide, 6 people is more than enough to bring any metropolitan area to it's knees. One terrorist waking to the security checkpoint of an airport with a bomb/grenade is enough to shut it down, divert emergency personnel and resources while the real terrorism happens elsewhere. Walking to the security checkpoint and pulling the pin is FSCKING easy. Children proved it was possible in Vietnam. To date, terrorist plots have not been anywhere near as horrifying as they could be.
As far as false positive? They will far outweigh true positives. Simply knowing that such equipment is installed will make people nervous. Lie detectors do NOT work and this has no chance of fairing any better. It will NOT stop terrorists. Any such attempt as this will fail, miserably, on financial and the ROI basis.
Who has that spam cure response form letter? We need one for the attempts to detect and stop terrorist.
The point? I'm going to guess that there are a few people that just simply would like to see these giant tortoises swimming around again. There are probably some people that would like to say "see, evolution DOES work"
There have been some hints that traits of those who survived past plagues could be used similarly, not through eugenics, but through gene therapy to improve mankind's overall situation with regard to retroviruses. Any experimentation in this regard could one day help to better mankind or repopulate parts of the world with food stocks that are more suited to the climate.
I'm not sure what Mastadon burgers taste like, but Fred and Barney seemed to like them, so if climate change makes that a more reliable feed stock for McD's I guess I'm okay with it. Closer to home, repopulating areas devastated by pollution or other natural disaster with a purpose bred animal which is similar/close to that which was lost in the catastrophe would be a good thing. Restock the pond with as close as we can get, let evolution do the rest.
There are animals that we would not like to see disappear. Odd creatures give us the ability to see how evolution has solved problems. See this TED talk http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/robert_full_on_animal_movement.html for reasons that we want to study odd little creatures, and perhaps even bring a few back to life from extinction.
I believe that there is a reason why what you say is more important than you know. Wikipedia gives a rough uniformity to the presentation of information. Using that and a few software tools, it's possible to glean more information than simply what was put into the wiki page. Deleting information too briskly will lead to a diminution of the value of both the wiki page information, reference veracity of the site, and the value of any information based on combinatorial information.
Using an example offered by someone else, if it is known that there are 123,000 high schools in the USA, and 75% of them are listed on Wikipedia. You can draw some reasonably credible information about high schools in the USA from scanning the wiki pages. Yes, Google indexes the Internet/www but the trouble is that information on the Internet is hardly presented in conformal manner. That is one of the benefits of Wikipedia, or could be.
There are lots of ideas about how to best organize the information on the Internet, but all of the require voluntary compliance by the authors of the information. That is the one very cool thing about Wikipedia. Perhaps, someone will suggest a semantic web version of how to publish pages of information on the Internet so that the combined reality of such pages IS a living encyclopedia. Using something like the single sign-on and security schemes, it is possible for vetted reviewers to rate each such site so that when you view it in your browser, those ratings are available for you to see. If the information on the site you are viewing is only rated 2 out of 10, then you know whether it is trustworthy information and whether you need to seek corroboration.
This deletion thing is sad in the respect of what it means, of what will not happen. Wikipedia is a good thing as an idea. It is even more valuable as a information repository or data warehouse. At least it could be... sigh
Now, you might disagree with me, but I think this officially means that the NSA and other government agencies (I'm looking at you Alaska) need to work extra hard to ensure their networks are locked down good.
Point and click becomes point and own? Maybe not that easy, but All your AP are belong to us is going to happen soon enough. One thing that Linux and F/OSS definitely does do; puts real software and OS in the hands of those that the NSA would rather not need to worry about.
I see a rather large police state like effort coming.
You are ABSOLUTELY correct, but my friend, this is how the new world order works. Mr Orwell is stirring gently, whispering "I told you so" and wondering why we didn't listen.
A picture of a prospective employee doing something untoward is as good as failing the Rorschach tests etc.
I personally want to know if an future employee actually knows how to do the job. I don't think that discriminating based on online activity is any less perilous than discriminating based on religion, sex, color, or creed. It's just that the NWO doesn't see that as discrimination. There is the real crux of the problem, amplified by the lax attitude of recent generations with regard to protecting private information.
Actually, I don't think it's moot. The idea that semantics can be played here means that a given percentile of the populace will be confused and not understand the dangers of posting a picture of their friend on the internet passed out, with the caption including their name and the particular substance involved. So a future employer check their myspace page, and pages of all his best friends. One lost job in the making, and not through personal mistakes, but because friends talk too much.
Personal information on the Internet is dangerous. My own family mocks my attempts to tell them not to do it, and to be very careful about what their friends post. Despite that there are pictures that are less than complimentary on line of them. I don't think that anyone can stress enough how those semantics will not protect them from a nosy prospective employer.
It's not as difficult as you simply believe to be listed in the rant sanctuary. A fervent rant against a yes comment is like turning around 360 degrees in the opposite direction, so it's clear as political speeches that you have no clue what they are talking about. Surely you have enough uncommon sense to surmise that to opine in the back alleys of slashdot is sublime when compared to posting on some other red comment news site. The evil underlords of slashdot have connived with trivial cunning to convince you to post pointlessly in the palacial purview of the idyllic idleness of Cowboy Neal's imaginings. Why, your sanctimonious slander of social news commentary condemnation is nearly pure evil, and should probably be better served by posting AC so we know who you are!! Be ashamed.
The ad is bad, certainly, but the editing room floor has the most important parts on it. The parts where each of those people (aside from Bill) said "because I believed what the kid in the store told me... only smart people wear clip on ties, right?"
They are launching just prior to the new moon http://www.astrologyoz.com/moon/2008moonphase.htm so on arrival, we won't be able to see it particularly well or at all. Wonder what the reason for that is? I think they are in collusion with the Illuminati and have Halloween evil planned for all of Earth. They didn't name their lander Kali by chance did they?
sorry, forgot that part... a computer terminal with the word Email written on the screen... There are many ways that it could be done in 3D virtual worlds, but such representations are easily recognized if done reasonably.
With the right services enabled, clicking on the terminal should open a form for typing the email in, or open your email client with all the header information filled in. Clicking on the phone should bring up a window with the details on it, and if enabled, open your skype client etc.
Friend Bill, If I am designing the website/page, rest assured that there will be someone there to punch, samurai sword on the wall for your convenience, and if possible, the mere act of you choosing to use it will send lights flashing and horns blaring in the call center along with your information so that someone contacts you directly asap.
What many do not understand is that the 3D worlds do permit a huge variety of interaction that a web page simply will not allow. I believe that 3D and virtual world websites will be much better than what web 2.0 looks to be.
For those of you familiar with SecondLife or other virtual online worlds, you will understand that the scripting will allow a huge variety of interactions. The 3D internet should allow you to interact passively (collecting information) as well as actively: speaking to a virtual customer service rep, leaving email, getting a phone contact and ref number, online chat, or all of the above. If you have a picture of the epic fail of the equipment you bought, by all means, drop it in the file folder you can pull from the cabinet to start your complaint file for us.
If all that we put up there for you to interact with is not enough, or you simply feel like venting, by all means try out the samurai sword, and our corporate overlord effigy in the corner there will be more than happy to field your complaint:)) Take pictures of the pieces and keep it in your wallet to remind you of a warm and fuzzy feeling next time you wish for the same facilities at your place of work:)
Let me have a stab at it... there are 3D objects that we recognize in every day life, and by converting menus and navigation of the site to 3D it is simpler for some people to understand than the maze of menus. That is one theory anyway.
People think in ways more inline with a 3D world than menus and submenus. Even if most of us can get used to it, I've seen people pissed because they can't find the "contact us" link. In a 3D world, that would be represented by a telephone or computer or mailbox etc.
Yes, it would have conventions that most web sites stick to now as well, but it's just another way to navigate and interface with the information on a website. Right now, there is no compelling reason to start shifting to that paradigm, but such has been the case with most large changes to how the WWW works.
Why buy a new car with GPS, TPS, rear view camera etc.?
The problem is that it's easier to just archive the cruft stuff than it is to go through it all and figure out what's worth keeping or training staff to organize their data and retain only that which is necessary .
There, fixed that for you. Meta-tags and other efforts might change this in the future, but until there is a generalized understanding of things that should be archived and things that should not, and a better way to store, find, retrieve, and utilize company data, there will be tons of data saved that really should not be. Humans are like that.
How many would do that? How many people feel like you do? People that hate dog shit where they can see it. How many feel strongly enough about it that when they see someone leave it on the sidewalk they wouldn't report it? You seem to have just the attitude of someone that would do that.
I'm cheering it. There are quite a few folks in the world that can neither attend the school, or afford it if they could attend physically. That said, they would love to have Stanford class material to learn from as part of their hobby ambitions. Hobbyists notoriously have a zero dollar budget and a zest for learning stuff. Even if it seems unlikely that you'd see Starbucks' employees logging on for a lecture during their lunch break, it's possible.
Anything that educational institutes can do to generally raise the engineering awareness and savvy of the population is fulfilling their mission in a broad sense. I'm fully going to do these courses. I have more time than spare coin at the moment, and Stanford level courses are appreciated. Even if I got credit for them it would not affect my paycheck. What I know, and what I have accomplished do more to shape that number than anything I might have learned in school. When you are 24 that piece of paper is very important. When you put 10+ years on that, people are far more concerned with what you have done since graduation. Adding additional studies to your resume might sound hokey, but it shows what a lot of people want to see... effort, desire, and staying in-career with your interests.
You might be a Windows system admin, but you only get to be a hero when you can also work on that new machine that the marketing guy set up and is now not working. Oh, yeah, it runs Linux. Specialists are passe' and the more you know how to deal with, the better you will deal with any one part of it. Continuing education is not a joke, and even this counts.
First up - IR license plate lights causing cameras to see nothing but glare where your license plate should be.
Next - New cameras at 400% the cost of the originals.
Followed quickly behind holographic projection license plate covers.
This can escalate for quite some time and only manufacturers and lawyers will make any money while not even 1/100th of one percent of criminals will be tracked with this system.
Sometime after it is established, the network will be hacked and more will be spent to secure the network. Still no criminals caught yet.
In larger cities, people will begin regularly using those rental cars things, where you all share vehicles, just grab one that is free at the moment. Fuel shortages will increase the use of alternatives to motor vehicles.
Criminals will always be using a stolen plate on the car they stole from elsewhere anyway.
The only people that can possibly be caught using this are stupid criminals and the innocent, where innocent is a variable of personal taste. A cheating husband is innocent in this case where it is used by his wife to catch him out.
Most interestingly, we'll be able to publicly verify that police are abandoning their creed of protect and serve with respect.
Does it sound to you like the intelligence agencies are a bit late to the game? Isn't big brother supposed to be watching everything we do? Carnivore and all that? Something sounds fishy about this, like a false flag kind of thing. You know they have been monitoring the intarwebtubes for child porn and anything else they can find. To hear someone say they are having trouble presenting information from the Internet is like saying NASCAR mechanics just found out ways to cheat using fuel additives.
I have no idea why you think they are thinking with any kind of common sense? Bush was thinking when he ordered the invasion of Iraq. What happened is that this is an election year, and the GOP has had nothing but trouble with the DOJ in the past 18 months. This would only serve as a source of more folly for politicians in the GOP who wish to be elected this year. The puppet masters told Bush to let/make this happen so that things don't get to out of kilter for the elections. Copyright cops would be the sound bite to really get the youth vote out to the polls this election, and who would win then? Who?
More to the point, the world is full of sheeple, they want someone to figure out what their world model should be so they don't have to do all that thinking. The cognitive dissonance resulting from that causes thinking, and thinking just won't do. The end result is that religious folk tend to be dogmatic about their beliefs because to doubt their beliefs causes more dissonance and thinking than it is worth to them. Simple. Sad. True
or the copyright owners of the smiley face will issue a DMCA take down notice.
Whether that would really happen or not, the news has become so much like the Onion that I kind of expect asshattery like that.
Am I the only one that noticed Hey, they can only have one baby, but we'll give them 3 IP addresses? Sounds like the Chinese government is getting liberal or something
I disagree with you. Not about the false positives. Were it worth the effort, I'd wager that I could plan, and execute bad actions with less stress to show than someone worried about making a connecting flight.
Remember, if you will, the single explosion (point of terrorism) is most of what we've seen. Should they decide, 6 people is more than enough to bring any metropolitan area to it's knees. One terrorist waking to the security checkpoint of an airport with a bomb/grenade is enough to shut it down, divert emergency personnel and resources while the real terrorism happens elsewhere. Walking to the security checkpoint and pulling the pin is FSCKING easy. Children proved it was possible in Vietnam. To date, terrorist plots have not been anywhere near as horrifying as they could be.
As far as false positive? They will far outweigh true positives. Simply knowing that such equipment is installed will make people nervous. Lie detectors do NOT work and this has no chance of fairing any better. It will NOT stop terrorists. Any such attempt as this will fail, miserably, on financial and the ROI basis.
Who has that spam cure response form letter? We need one for the attempts to detect and stop terrorist.
The point? I'm going to guess that there are a few people that just simply would like to see these giant tortoises swimming around again. There are probably some people that would like to say "see, evolution DOES work"
There have been some hints that traits of those who survived past plagues could be used similarly, not through eugenics, but through gene therapy to improve mankind's overall situation with regard to retroviruses. Any experimentation in this regard could one day help to better mankind or repopulate parts of the world with food stocks that are more suited to the climate.
I'm not sure what Mastadon burgers taste like, but Fred and Barney seemed to like them, so if climate change makes that a more reliable feed stock for McD's I guess I'm okay with it. Closer to home, repopulating areas devastated by pollution or other natural disaster with a purpose bred animal which is similar/close to that which was lost in the catastrophe would be a good thing. Restock the pond with as close as we can get, let evolution do the rest.
There are animals that we would not like to see disappear. Odd creatures give us the ability to see how evolution has solved problems. See this TED talk http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/robert_full_on_animal_movement.html for reasons that we want to study odd little creatures, and perhaps even bring a few back to life from extinction.
I believe that there is a reason why what you say is more important than you know. Wikipedia gives a rough uniformity to the presentation of information. Using that and a few software tools, it's possible to glean more information than simply what was put into the wiki page. Deleting information too briskly will lead to a diminution of the value of both the wiki page information, reference veracity of the site, and the value of any information based on combinatorial information.
Using an example offered by someone else, if it is known that there are 123,000 high schools in the USA, and 75% of them are listed on Wikipedia. You can draw some reasonably credible information about high schools in the USA from scanning the wiki pages. Yes, Google indexes the Internet/www but the trouble is that information on the Internet is hardly presented in conformal manner. That is one of the benefits of Wikipedia, or could be.
There are lots of ideas about how to best organize the information on the Internet, but all of the require voluntary compliance by the authors of the information. That is the one very cool thing about Wikipedia. Perhaps, someone will suggest a semantic web version of how to publish pages of information on the Internet so that the combined reality of such pages IS a living encyclopedia. Using something like the single sign-on and security schemes, it is possible for vetted reviewers to rate each such site so that when you view it in your browser, those ratings are available for you to see. If the information on the site you are viewing is only rated 2 out of 10, then you know whether it is trustworthy information and whether you need to seek corroboration.
This deletion thing is sad in the respect of what it means, of what will not happen. Wikipedia is a good thing as an idea. It is even more valuable as a information repository or data warehouse. At least it could be... sigh
Now, you might disagree with me, but I think this officially means that the NSA and other government agencies (I'm looking at you Alaska) need to work extra hard to ensure their networks are locked down good.
Point and click becomes point and own? Maybe not that easy, but All your AP are belong to us is going to happen soon enough. One thing that Linux and F/OSS definitely does do; puts real software and OS in the hands of those that the NSA would rather not need to worry about.
I see a rather large police state like effort coming.
You are ABSOLUTELY correct, but my friend, this is how the new world order works. Mr Orwell is stirring gently, whispering "I told you so" and wondering why we didn't listen.
A picture of a prospective employee doing something untoward is as good as failing the Rorschach tests etc.
I personally want to know if an future employee actually knows how to do the job. I don't think that discriminating based on online activity is any less perilous than discriminating based on religion, sex, color, or creed. It's just that the NWO doesn't see that as discrimination. There is the real crux of the problem, amplified by the lax attitude of recent generations with regard to protecting private information.
Actually, I don't think it's moot. The idea that semantics can be played here means that a given percentile of the populace will be confused and not understand the dangers of posting a picture of their friend on the internet passed out, with the caption including their name and the particular substance involved. So a future employer check their myspace page, and pages of all his best friends. One lost job in the making, and not through personal mistakes, but because friends talk too much.
Personal information on the Internet is dangerous. My own family mocks my attempts to tell them not to do it, and to be very careful about what their friends post. Despite that there are pictures that are less than complimentary on line of them. I don't think that anyone can stress enough how those semantics will not protect them from a nosy prospective employer.
It's not as difficult as you simply believe to be listed in the rant sanctuary. A fervent rant against a yes comment is like turning around 360 degrees in the opposite direction, so it's clear as political speeches that you have no clue what they are talking about. Surely you have enough uncommon sense to surmise that to opine in the back alleys of slashdot is sublime when compared to posting on some other red comment news site. The evil underlords of slashdot have connived with trivial cunning to convince you to post pointlessly in the palacial purview of the idyllic idleness of Cowboy Neal's imaginings. Why, your sanctimonious slander of social news commentary condemnation is nearly pure evil, and should probably be better served by posting AC so we know who you are!! Be ashamed.
The ad is bad, certainly, but the editing room floor has the most important parts on it. The parts where each of those people (aside from Bill) said "because I believed what the kid in the store told me... only smart people wear clip on ties, right?"
arrrrggghhhh
At least someone saw the humor
They are launching just prior to the new moon http://www.astrologyoz.com/moon/2008moonphase.htm so on arrival, we won't be able to see it particularly well or at all. Wonder what the reason for that is? I think they are in collusion with the Illuminati and have Halloween evil planned for all of Earth. They didn't name their lander Kali by chance did they?
sorry, forgot that part... a computer terminal with the word Email written on the screen... There are many ways that it could be done in 3D virtual worlds, but such representations are easily recognized if done reasonably.
With the right services enabled, clicking on the terminal should open a form for typing the email in, or open your email client with all the header information filled in. Clicking on the phone should bring up a window with the details on it, and if enabled, open your skype client etc.
Friend Bill,
If I am designing the website/page, rest assured that there will be someone there to punch, samurai sword on the wall for your convenience, and if possible, the mere act of you choosing to use it will send lights flashing and horns blaring in the call center along with your information so that someone contacts you directly asap.
What many do not understand is that the 3D worlds do permit a huge variety of interaction that a web page simply will not allow. I believe that 3D and virtual world websites will be much better than what web 2.0 looks to be.
For those of you familiar with SecondLife or other virtual online worlds, you will understand that the scripting will allow a huge variety of interactions. The 3D internet should allow you to interact passively (collecting information) as well as actively: speaking to a virtual customer service rep, leaving email, getting a phone contact and ref number, online chat, or all of the above. If you have a picture of the epic fail of the equipment you bought, by all means, drop it in the file folder you can pull from the cabinet to start your complaint file for us.
If all that we put up there for you to interact with is not enough, or you simply feel like venting, by all means try out the samurai sword, and our corporate overlord effigy in the corner there will be more than happy to field your complaint :)) Take pictures of the pieces and keep it in your wallet to remind you of a warm and fuzzy feeling next time you wish for the same facilities at your place of work :)
Let me have a stab at it... there are 3D objects that we recognize in every day life, and by converting menus and navigation of the site to 3D it is simpler for some people to understand than the maze of menus. That is one theory anyway.
People think in ways more inline with a 3D world than menus and submenus. Even if most of us can get used to it, I've seen people pissed because they can't find the "contact us" link. In a 3D world, that would be represented by a telephone or computer or mailbox etc.
Yes, it would have conventions that most web sites stick to now as well, but it's just another way to navigate and interface with the information on a website. Right now, there is no compelling reason to start shifting to that paradigm, but such has been the case with most large changes to how the WWW works.
Why buy a new car with GPS, TPS, rear view camera etc.?
The problem is that it's easier to just archive the cruft stuff than it is to go through it all and figure out what's worth keeping or training staff to organize their data and retain only that which is necessary .
There, fixed that for you. Meta-tags and other efforts might change this in the future, but until there is a generalized understanding of things that should be archived and things that should not, and a better way to store, find, retrieve, and utilize company data, there will be tons of data saved that really should not be. Humans are like that.
How many would do that? How many people feel like you do? People that hate dog shit where they can see it. How many feel strongly enough about it that when they see someone leave it on the sidewalk they wouldn't report it? You seem to have just the attitude of someone that would do that.
Or worse, someone takes your dog's poop out and leaves it on the sidewalk to be found because they don't like you?
Apparently the thousands and thousands of cameras in England are no substitute for DNA testing... wonder what the ROI and cost comparisons are?
I'm cheering it. There are quite a few folks in the world that can neither attend the school, or afford it if they could attend physically. That said, they would love to have Stanford class material to learn from as part of their hobby ambitions. Hobbyists notoriously have a zero dollar budget and a zest for learning stuff. Even if it seems unlikely that you'd see Starbucks' employees logging on for a lecture during their lunch break, it's possible.
Anything that educational institutes can do to generally raise the engineering awareness and savvy of the population is fulfilling their mission in a broad sense. I'm fully going to do these courses. I have more time than spare coin at the moment, and Stanford level courses are appreciated. Even if I got credit for them it would not affect my paycheck. What I know, and what I have accomplished do more to shape that number than anything I might have learned in school. When you are 24 that piece of paper is very important. When you put 10+ years on that, people are far more concerned with what you have done since graduation. Adding additional studies to your resume might sound hokey, but it shows what a lot of people want to see... effort, desire, and staying in-career with your interests.
You might be a Windows system admin, but you only get to be a hero when you can also work on that new machine that the marketing guy set up and is now not working. Oh, yeah, it runs Linux. Specialists are passe' and the more you know how to deal with, the better you will deal with any one part of it. Continuing education is not a joke, and even this counts.
I saw all those comments hinting that this treatment seemed sadistic, and I immediately thought, sadistic? try watching network television....
I suppose it would work though, I just get an image of Will Smith in a particularly nasty Clockwork Orange therapy film... over and over
First up - IR license plate lights causing cameras to see nothing but glare where your license plate should be.
Next - New cameras at 400% the cost of the originals.
Followed quickly behind holographic projection license plate covers.
This can escalate for quite some time and only manufacturers and lawyers will make any money while not even 1/100th of one percent of criminals will be tracked with this system.
Sometime after it is established, the network will be hacked and more will be spent to secure the network. Still no criminals caught yet.
In larger cities, people will begin regularly using those rental cars things, where you all share vehicles, just grab one that is free at the moment. Fuel shortages will increase the use of alternatives to motor vehicles.
Criminals will always be using a stolen plate on the car they stole from elsewhere anyway.
The only people that can possibly be caught using this are stupid criminals and the innocent, where innocent is a variable of personal taste. A cheating husband is innocent in this case where it is used by his wife to catch him out.
Most interestingly, we'll be able to publicly verify that police are abandoning their creed of protect and serve with respect.
Well, they are possibilities...
Actually, you're on to something:
constant worrying about common foods = stress
and?
stress = heart health problems
Cancer is more destructive in those persons who are less able to defend against it.
Stress = weakened immune response
Spontaneous combustion? you're on your own with that one
Does it sound to you like the intelligence agencies are a bit late to the game? Isn't big brother supposed to be watching everything we do? Carnivore and all that? Something sounds fishy about this, like a false flag kind of thing. You know they have been monitoring the intarwebtubes for child porn and anything else they can find. To hear someone say they are having trouble presenting information from the Internet is like saying NASCAR mechanics just found out ways to cheat using fuel additives.
Seriously, nobody here believes this bs do they?