There is no longer even a mention of the X-UIDH opt out there. The last time I looked, it listed the toll-free opt-out number (that requires a password to use) and a link to sign up for Verizon Selects (which uses the X-UIDH).
The Rogers Family coffee roasters are already being targeted by Keurig's lawyers because they sell their own biodegradableOneCup that works fine in Keurig machines. That's why Rogers developed the Freedom Clip in the first place.
Since Techdirt published this story, there's been a change of administrations in NYC. Has anyone tried to ask the same questions of the same offices there more recently? Seems like De Blasio wouldn't mind recovering some unearned subsidies.
In fact, yes. Damned straight that the white suburbs were insulated. Where do you think all the National Guard troops were stationed? Not in Ferguson...but in the surrounding white suburbs.
And I'm talking about air-chilled AMERICAN chicken, Bell & Evans foremost among the brands. Whole Foods sells both Bell & Evans and house-branded air-chilled chicken.
doing the chlorinating. Chickens end up retaining not-tasty waterwater from the baths, and the chlorine doesn't kill all the salmonella, which means that previously uncontaminated chicken routinely becomes contaminated when it hits the water. That's why I only buy air-chilled chicken. Not only does it taste better because it hasn't been soaked in chlorinated water, studies of supermarket chicken have typically found zero salmonella on air-chilled chicken, while finding universal salmonella contamination to one degree or another on water-chilled chicken.
I like to let mine cold brew 24 hours before pulling the bag.
I've been using Peet's Decaf House Blend lately because it's been on special at supermarkets in my area, but this process even makes very drinkable coffee using cheaper supermarket brands.
Bring a bottle of concentrate to the office and add hot water, one part concentrate to two parts water, and enjoy.
Anyone who has been paying attention knows that the NSA and all the other three-letter agencies have since the Reagan administration been little more than vacuum hoses designed to siphon money out of taxpayers' pockets into the bank accounts of the connected ultra-wealthy who own the contracting companies. All this money being spent on surveillance isn't about security at all. That's just the lie told to justify it to outsiders. Screwups like this just mean more money for the contractors that fix them, usually the same ones who screwed up in the first place.
I wonder what Terry O'Reilly will have to say about this?
He loves to talk about this sort of self-pwn on his CBC show/podcast "Under the Influence".
Re: Re: Re: Said to the tune of the world's smallest violin
Ah, I left out the link: http://pllqt.it/1oxoO2
Re: Re: Said to the tune of the world's smallest violin
You're better informed by watching and reading nothing than you are watching Fox News.
Turned off the uBlock...
... and the UIDH info displays.
Thanks!
They changed the Privacy Policy Opt-Out page.
There is no longer even a mention of the X-UIDH opt out there. The last time I looked, it listed the toll-free opt-out number (that requires a password to use) and a link to sign up for Verizon Selects (which uses the X-UIDH).
That's it.
There's a catch to the "opt-out"
You can't opt out using the toll-free number if the login to your Verizon Wireless account uses capital letters in the password. When I called 866-211-0874, it demanded my account password.
And, of course, there is no web-based opt-out on the VZW web site.
So for me to pot out, I have to change my password first.
Re: Anybody know...
It's still available in the Google Play Store.
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=org.aclunj.policetape
Rogers is already being sued
The Rogers Family coffee roasters are already being targeted by Keurig's lawyers because they sell their own biodegradable OneCup that works fine in Keurig machines. That's why Rogers developed the Freedom Clip in the first place.
There's been a change of administration in NYC
Since Techdirt published this story, there's been a change of administrations in NYC. Has anyone tried to ask the same questions of the same offices there more recently? Seems like De Blasio wouldn't mind recovering some unearned subsidies.
Re: Re: "these police who did this are part of the 'us'"-- Are you sure?
In fact, yes. Damned straight that the white suburbs were insulated. Where do you think all the National Guard troops were stationed? Not in Ferguson...but in the surrounding white suburbs.
"these police who did this are part of the 'us'"-- Are you sure?
If Ferguson police are anything like most police departments in the USA, odds are most of them DO NOT LIVE IN FERGUSON.
http://fivethirtyeight.com/datalab/most-police-dont-live-in-the-cities-they-serve/
Certainly, Darren Wilson doesn't. He lives about a half hour away, in Crestwood, a segregated white suburb of St Louis.
Re: Re: The real problem with chlorinated chicken...
Here's a great Consumer Reports story, citing Bell & Evans as the only source in their survey that produced "clean" chickens.
http://pllqt.it/7xS6tq
Re: Re: The real problem with chlorinated chicken...
When did salmonella learn to jump an air gap?
And I'm talking about air-chilled AMERICAN chicken, Bell & Evans foremost among the brands. Whole Foods sells both Bell & Evans and house-branded air-chilled chicken.
The real problem with chlorinated chicken...
... is the chilled water bath doing the chlorinating. etc. I don't have a clue how that sentence was truncated.
The real problem with chlorinated chicken...
doing the chlorinating. Chickens end up retaining not-tasty waterwater from the baths, and the chlorine doesn't kill all the salmonella, which means that previously uncontaminated chicken routinely becomes contaminated when it hits the water. That's why I only buy air-chilled chicken. Not only does it taste better because it hasn't been soaked in chlorinated water, studies of supermarket chicken have typically found zero salmonella on air-chilled chicken, while finding universal salmonella contamination to one degree or another on water-chilled chicken.
Re: Nightingale's paper is hilarious
The word "email" certainly did exist before 1978. It meant "to put on chain mail armor". The original term for electronic mail was "e-mail".
"The first use of e-mail was in 1971 on the ARPANET (see also “Internet,” p. 34). It was developed by Ray Tomlinson (b. 1941)." http://bit.ly/valies
For some reason, the hyphen was lost during the 80's; but I still can't help typing it.
Screw all these coffee makers.
Here's the best, easiest and cheapest way to make really great coffee: cold brew coffee concentrate made using a nut milk bag.
http://boingboing.net/2013/07/20/cheap-easy-no-mess-cold-brew.html
I like to let mine cold brew 24 hours before pulling the bag.
I've been using Peet's Decaf House Blend lately because it's been on special at supermarkets in my area, but this process even makes very drinkable coffee using cheaper supermarket brands.
Bring a bottle of concentrate to the office and add hot water, one part concentrate to two parts water, and enjoy.
This is a feature, not a bug
Anyone who has been paying attention knows that the NSA and all the other three-letter agencies have since the Reagan administration been little more than vacuum hoses designed to siphon money out of taxpayers' pockets into the bank accounts of the connected ultra-wealthy who own the contracting companies. All this money being spent on surveillance isn't about security at all. That's just the lie told to justify it to outsiders. Screwups like this just mean more money for the contractors that fix them, usually the same ones who screwed up in the first place.
Re: Hmmm....
Of course, the idea was far from original in 2011.
I was reading stories about this sort of thing in Analog back in the 70's.
This is the same lawsuit.
Judge Buchanan made her ruling a month early.
http://bit.ly/xdaqfD