SP: “Hey, Webdom, do you know a good GDPR consultant?”
Webdom: “Yes.”
SP: “Can you give me her email address?”
Webdom: “No.”
If you’ve ever signed up for an email newsletter, registered for a user account online, or purchased something from an online purveyor, you’ve undoubtedly been bombarded the last week (or longer) with emails like the one above. You’ve noticed the new cookie notice here on Glibertarians.com. You might have even read our Privacy Policy.
I’m not going to get into the details of the mind-numbing array of things the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) requires to be in compliance. I’m not a lawyer and much of it is open to interpretation.
If you’re interested there is no shortage of online resources, including the EU’s own website. Companies across the globe have been working on this compliance since the law was passed in April 2016.
No, what I want to rant about is the fact that as of May 25, 2018, the provisions of the 2-year-old regulation are now enforceable.
I hear you saying, “So what? It’s an EU law, and we aren’t in the EU.”
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
You crack me up.
The new regulation is supposedly to protect EU citizens and their “personally identifiable information” (PII) that may be collected, processed, stored, and transferred online.
What the EU considers PII is much broader than what the US has generally considered PII. The EU insists that anything that could directly or indirectly be used to identify someone is included.
Personal data is any information that relates to an identified or identifiable living individual.
Different pieces of information, which collected together can lead to the identification of a particular person, also constitute personal data. Personal data that has been de-identified, encrypted or pseudonymised but can be used to re-identify a person remains personal data and falls within the scope of the law.
*****
So, how the heck is the EU going to enforce the myriad complex and heavily nuanced provisions of the law? Fairly and objectively.
OK, I couldn’t even type that with a straight face.
The EU provides this helpful information:
Stronger rules on data protection mean
people have more control over their personal data businesses benefit from a level playing field
Oh, good! Businesses are going to benefit!
Well, Uncle Sam wants to help make sure that US businesses are also going to benefit. The EU-U.S. Privacy Shield Framework is the mechanism by which the EU can impose their laws and regulations on US businesses and non-profits.
What’s that? Non-profits like the Glibertarian Foundation? Why, yes!
The U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has committed to work closely with the DPA (SP note: data protection authority in the EU) to provide enforcement assistance, which, in appropriate cases, could include information sharing and investigative assistance pursuant to the U.S. SAFE WEB ACT.
Indeed, one of the key provisions of the GDPR is increased territorial scope. Because of this, any website that “processes” any data from anyone in the EU must comply. Your business website may only ever have one visitor from the EU and if you set a web browser cookie for any reason whatsoever, you must meet the requirements of the GDPR. Seriously.
What’s the penalty for non-compliance?
Infringement: the possibilities include a reprimand, a temporary or definitive ban on processing and a fine of up to €20 million or 4% of the business’s total annual worldwide turnover.
Oh, and that fine is whichever is greater. No potential there for abuse or selective enforcement! But remember, this is not about grabbing money or controlling the world. Because the Forces of Evil said it’s not.
*****
So, what are US businesses doing? Most have been working on compliance for a long time now and are falling into line. Nobody really wants to lose their European customers and site visitors, after all.
Except for a bunch of media outlets and businesses that apparently weren’t ready for the enforcement to start on Friday. But, the EU says, don’t worry! There will not be an effect on innovation or access. Oh, wait, other organizations have just decided not to bother complying, closing business segments or blocking access from European countries.
Here at Glib HQ, we’ve determined that we have only one European registered user. We’ll miss you Pie in the Sky!*
We all know who is making bank from the GDPR, as is usual from regulation: lawyers and politicians. On Friday, many lawsuits and complaints were filed against large American tech firms like Amazon, Facebook, and Alphabet. We can expect dozens more to be filed in the coming weeks, months, and, probably, years.
*****
Does my disgust and cynicism mean I am anti-privacy? Hell, no.
I have many stylish and useful tinfoil hats, as you all know. I use VPNs, encrypted email, mask my phone numbers, block cookies, browse from different browsers and devices, use cash for everything I can, have a prepaid cell phone for certain uses. The list goes on.
What I am is anti-government intrusion and regulation.
Remember, kids, with the exception of this Glibertopia, “If the product is free, the product is me.” Don’t like what Facebook does with your data? Don’t use Facebook; but don’t insist your congress critter pass another law or allow the FTC to enforce a cumbersome and impossible-to-get-right regulation from across the pond. Individuals and their rights always lose when bureaucracy wins.
* Just kidding, Pie.
We are gonna miss you Pie*
Just kidding, Pie.
So you aren’t really going to miss Pie ?
Well, I nearly said that, but it seemed…unkind.
I would miss Pie if he doesn’t show up.
We all want pie. All of us.
#metoo
He has a midday post going up tomorrow.
Oooo… tomorrow being a holiday, despite my needing to get work done around the house, means I might see the post when it is live and not dead! Nice!
He never really specified what kind of pie he is.
Almost irrelevant. As long as he isn’t minced meat pie.
Virtually everyone I talk to about GDPR judges it on its (stated) intentions, not its outcomes. This is true even where the people you’re talking to have personal experience of its outcomes.
*smdh*
See also Net Neutrality.
I think you should treat these laws the same way that I treat drug and firearm laws.
Glibertarians.com is going to be lost in a tragic canoe accident?
+1 life jacket
Just need to have Burt Reynolds there with a compound bow and its all good.
-1 Tom Thomson
This is the part I don’t get. Why would the US willingly allow this, instead of telling the EU to pound sand? If I am not mistaken we have done this already in other situations where some other country tries to impose its laws on us.
Why would the US willingly allow this, instead of telling the EU to pound sand?
Joy to you, friend. Peace and contentment. It was the will of Obama.
Star Trek old school.
*golf clap*
I was thinking of a Nigerian 419 scam.
That guys long tentacles need to be cut.
Sometimes, if you’re nice to them they bring you things.
Why would the US willingly allow this, instead of telling the EU to pound sand?
Because the U.S. already does stuff like this elsewhere in the world. I have a buddy who’s had to deal with the extraterritorial reach of a number of U.S. business regs for many years now, and he regularly tears his hair out about it.
Extraterritoriality’s a bitch, and everyone wants in on the act.
Clicked on the .ppt graphic so I could read it on my tablet. MFG there’s a metric shit ton of those! All saying basically nothing. One does have a bubble for “Think of the Children!” which makes me feel better.
And WTF is it with the number 6?
Whatever else this does or doesn’t do it creates a billlion Euro compliance industry.
All those .ppts remind of the posters, briefings and binders that OSHA compliance vendors sell so businesses can impress their OSHA inspectors.
Oh, and I like the part where they claim juristiction anywhere an EU citizen might use the internet.
Right?
All I see is “German Democratic People’s Republic” when I see GDPR
sehr gut
I don’t see that because I know its name is DDR.
papiere, bitte.
The state having your PII, on the other hand,….
But it’s the government, man. They would never so anything untoward with your data.
To be fair, a lot of private companies also require a pii test as part of your hiring.
Yea, it seems to be mostly Lefties who are whining about what Facebook and other websites are doing with “their data”, but I didn’t hear much complaining from them when Obama’s NSA was hoovering up data on American citizens whether they liked it or not.
I’m not scared of what private corporations want to do with data – they want to sell you shit. If I find the collection of that data to be intolerable, I’ll switch to an alternative (like DuckDuckGo) that does not collect or sell your data.
I AM scared of what the government will do with that data. You only have to look to the 20th century for plenty of examples.
Yes.
/passes Akira a beautifully tailored tinfoil bowler
Don’t like what Facebook does with your data? Don’t use Facebook
That is an onerous and unreasonable burden.
IANAL, but I do know that it would take more than a couple of hours to whip up a complaint for a lawsuit. Which means that these lawsuits have been in the can waiting for the law to come into effect. FFS, I hate people.
It is going to cost (conservatively) hundreds of millions of euros for all these companies to find out (by litigation) whether they are actually complying with the law. You see it is not there interpretation that counts. It is the courts.
^^^This times hundreds of millions.
Uffda!
I am glad I didn’t see this earlier. I could spend hours and hours complaining about GDPR.
In a previous life I worked for a large German company building IoT apps. One of them was for an American firm who did sell overseas. As such, we spent over 3 months trying to figure out what we had to do to comply with GDPR.
We had at least 15 lawyers on every call and 2 technical people to explain what we captured and what we did with it. We were lucky, the company did absolutely nothing really with the data we collected (didn’t sell it or use it – they were far more interested in performance data of their product than who was using it).
One of the gems that I learned is that the GDPR is pretty loosely written and one of the problems compliance people have is that the “actual” interpretation of many of the regulations will depend on court cases. Worse, in the run up till now, there were no penalties to no one could bring this shit to a court case to find out what the real meaning of a regulation was.
That is what really chaps me about this. Not only is it a boondoggle to make money for consultants, but those consultants are pure charlatans if they pretend they actually know the ins and outs of the GDPR.
Why would the US willingly allow this, instead of telling the EU to pound sand?
Really. We’re the only ones who get to impose our laws on a global basis, right Swiss?
I find them equally offensive
And Will Power wins the Indianapolis five fucking hundred. Shit. I was rooting for Servia.
* why don’t those bozos know what gear to be in on a restart?
Riccardio won Monaco!
Sorry about the Blues – at least they hung in there for three quarters against the Cats. Then they seemed to just wilt. They’re going to need a couple years rebuilding, I think.
I was amazed at the Demons v Crows. The Demons hadn’t been very good against any team near the top of the table this year, but that was a dismantling. Apparently they can play against tough opposition. Good to know.
Carlton also has a tough, tough schedule this year, while the Demons… well… play the Eagles near the end of the season. Seriously, it seems like the schedulers wanted to set up the Dees for the final, and the Blues for #1 draft pick.
Yeah, seems about right. Remains to be seen if they’re committed to Bolton. As for Geelong game, if you can’t kick straight…20 scoring shots to 18, it should at least have been a lot closer.
I am in the middle of watching Magpies’ comeback against the Bulldogs. One more quarter to watch later tonight. NO SPOILERS. Then I have 3 others taped, though now I think I can scratch off Cats v. Blues 🙂
Sorry, Rhywun. I’ll keep any future discussion of AFL results until Monday from now on.
Nah, don’t worry about it. I rarely get around to watching everything I tape anyway.
I noticed the goal/behind difference (Lions v Swans had the same dynamic), but I didn’t want to push the needle.
For your sake, I hope it’s a good draft (I don’t follow that closely. Hell, I don’t follow US football that closely).
Reverse, am I right?
But it’s the government, man. They would never so anything untoward with your data.
They’re from the government. They’re here to help us.
The government is us, so there’s no problem with us having our own data.
/Obama supporter
lol.
Obama would NEVER have used data for political expediency because classy and dignified.
For the most part I’ve ignored the GDPR. I don’t run sites that might get whacked by it. But, once I had to pay attention.
I’m on the Vienna Philharmonic’s mailing list for announcements about their Summer Night Concert and New Year’s Concert. If I remember correctly, I had to explicitly sign up for the list.
Recently, I received a mail from the list about the Summer Night Concert. In the mail was a blurb telling me that due to new European privacy regulations (they didn’t mention GDPR specifically, but I know what they were talking about), in order to continue receiving this mailings, I have to explicitly sign up to continue receiving them.
Fuck. I only receive these mailing because I explicitly signed up for them. Now I have to say, “I really, really, REALLY mean it!”
Fuck.
Most pathetic example of white guilt yet?
That’s a bar I won’t go to.
I was just about to invite you for a round of drinks, on me.
Heh, heh, heh….
Hmm… trolling them? You might be able to convince me to change my mind.
You owe it to yourself to go.
*applause*
I think that if they actually convince people to give them money, they’re kinda brilliant.
M.,.v. ,xxzz c c xzx. C,z , ,
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What about the JOOOOOZ?
Is this one of those times when we count as non-white people? Do (((we))) get free drinks?
Haven’t (((you))) people taken enough?
/saunters off to Stormfront
They should’ve let white people attend and not asked them to donate, just strongly suggested that white people buy drinks for non-whites.
Then the bar profits, the non-whites profit, whites feel good about themselves, everyone makes some new friends, and I have a laugh and am impressed by the savviness of it all.
Bringin’ people together.
But of course that’s not the route they took. Because progressives suck, promote segregation and sow division.
Kinda like Ladies’ Night?
The feeling’s right.
Remember, all this just because of some Trump memes.
Level playing field and regulation, just what I love to hear. For some reason it always seems to mean raising the level to the advantage of bigger companies.
“Except in certain, limited instances, organisations now must demonstrate they have our explicit consent to process our sensitive personal data.”
Huh, I wonder* who might get an exception.
*Not really.
Had to comment on this description by the NYT’s of California’s top two primary system (via a link from this morning):
HAHAHA. Sure, it was meant to create moderation, you lying cunts.
I’m perhaps sensing a little bit of doubt on your part. Do you not trust the NYT (and California) to tell you the truth?
Wait, whut? Hillary carried seven districts which currently have R reps?
Memorial Day.
http://i.imgur.com/aetidNQ.jpg
Also, I don’t know why companies don’t just do an IP block on any EU based addresses. By the same token, EU people could just use a VPN to get around it.
Nice ass.
RE: the IP block: Companies like the filthy lucre more than me.
I was wondering if a VPN would solve the problem. Thanks for the answer.
I already feel more… patriotic.
I always use VPNs, on my computers and my mobile devices. You can tell which websites are tracking your IP geolocation by what ads, units of measure, and language they serve up. It can be quite amusing.
Opera browser has a VPN built-in. (Not the only one I rely on, though.)
There are a number of private browsers for mobile devices, too.
If you are becoming as realistic as I have become (not paranoid!), you might want to look into Abine’s products.
It isn’t just about handling data from a region.
If you already have data from people in the EU, you better be sure you care about the GDPR because people will be visiting you. And even if they use a VPN and get an IP in the US and you save that data improperly (and could be said to know it came from an EU user) you better care about the GDPR.
The law is an abomination. It was passed by pols who know nothing about technology.
I have a good friend who is a pretty big fish in Minnesoda politics. In the 90’s when they were trying to pass one of the silly laws to ban child pr0n on the internet, I had a beer with him and tried to explain why it was such a dumb idea.
After drawing a bunch of diagrams on bar napkins, I finally got him to understand that child pr0n isn’t passed directly from one perv to another. It is routed through a series of switches and other network equipment and that the proposed law would make all those intermediaries guilty of trafficking in kiddie pr0n. He was absolutely stunned at that news. Turns out all his staffers were like him: tech illiterate lawyers who thought the law was good.
OT: What vegetables can I plant right now that will give me a decent harvest before winter?
I tried to start some lettuce seeds in small cups by the window, but they’re not sprouting for some reason. I just weeded and hoed all this garden space, and I don’t want to go all year without planting anything at all…
You’re in Ohio, right? Look for short(er) season tomato varieties. Summer squash. Shorter season peppers. Green beans. And plant herbs. Those can be dried or frozen. Make loads of pesto with abundant basil.
You can start the green beans and squash from seeds directly sown into the ground. I’d purchase tomato and pepper plants.
Oh, maybe some of the smaller pie pumpkins and watermelons. Green onions.
If you think you’ll be there a few years, you can start asparagus this year, too.
Thanks!
Maybe I’ll swing by the store and get some seeds for those…
As it gets cooler toward the fall, you can plant some lettuce and spinach directly in the ground. Neither of those are that crazy about the heat, but will be harvestable right up until the frost.
/loves gardening and canning
Why?
When we moved to Montana when we were first married, a friend asked what in the world OMWC was thinking as the state vegetable is veal.
That’s an excellent state vegetable.
I took a CA friend of mine to a BBQ joint in Kansas City. When we got there she looked nonplussed by the menu so I asked her if I could help. She told me she was a vegetarian but figured any restaurant would have salads on the menu. I kind of exchanged looks with the guy behind the counter but we worked out a bunch of side sides so she didn’t starve.
All of the vegetables I cook are cooked in stock (usually chicken).
I’m a hardcore carnivore, but for some reason I don’t eat veal. Not even sure why.
I just got back from a diabetic deathtrap (Hershey’s Chocolate World).
The place is like a parody of a corporate theme park. It is both surreal and nightmarish.
The entire city smells like chocolate.
Not anymore 🙁 They shut down the factory inside the city for a larger one west of it.
Awwww. That was a huge part of the charm. (All of the charm?)
There was a chocolate factory down the road from my old grade school. You stopped noticing the smell of chocolate after a while.
Almost as good as all of Golden, CO smelling like beer.
I used to live near a Wonder Bread factory in Buffalo. A wonderful smell.
Much better than the photographic chemicals I grew up breathing in Rochester.
On the freeway in Oakland you used to drive by, in order, Continental Can Company (yuck), Wonderbread (nice), Dad’s Oatmeal Cookies (nicer) and then Calo pet foods (really gross).
I’m always amazed at how smell can immediately transport a person back to their childhood (or any other important time in their life). I don’t miss my darkroom days, but the smell of photographic chemicals always makes me a little nostalgic, nonetheless . . .
My wife and I walked home from a friends’ place last night, and on the way home I smelled the unmistakable odour of a “punk stick,” a kind of low-rent incense stick that, when I was a kid, used to be used as a lasting ignition source for lighting the fuses of firecrackers and other fireworks. My wife was totally unfamiliar with the smell, since her Dad (who was a PITA sometimes) would never let his kids play with fireworks.
Yep we used punks also for fireworks. Another great memory triggering smell is the first shotgun shell fired during opening day of duck season; “smokeless” powder.
And the unique smell of a mix of burned powder and the lube wax on 22 LR.
Specifically to me also the smell of my paraffin/beeswax/graphite homemade bullet lube. Also, the taste of wild muscadine.
And one other thing I wont mention.
I was thinking of the particular 22LR smell too.
Oh… I meant photographic chemicals belching out of Kodak smokestacks.
Oh, I took video of the “Create Your Own Candy Bar” as it was processing. I also went as outlandish as the limited choices would let me – white chocolate base, toffee bits, butterscotch chips, pretzel pieces, milk chocolate coating (mandatory) and sprinkles.
After I get home I’ll see how the video turned out and see if I can’t edit it together into something watchable.
Nice. I don’t remember being able to create my own when I visited as a kid.
Well, all the controls on the line are a set of touchscreens with your inputs tied to the barcode on your ticket, the machine itself is a candy bar robot that just makes the configurations sent to it in series. I think the production machines themselves were repurposed out of hardware from the old factory, with the frontend set up to be “general public compatable” (including small children).
white chocolate is the most ucs starting point possible.
I was a little kid when I was in Hershey. I remember the amusement park. I remember also taking the factory tour, and thinking, “This is the videos I see of Disney rides”. I liked the candy samples at the end.
Yeah, the “tour” didn’t even have pictures of the actual production line. It was a reskinned amusement park ride.
Booooo! I love love love to see how stuff is made.
What’s the best way to embed a video in an article on this site? If I have worthwhile footage, I can put up the custom candy bar video. (I’ve not yet reviewed what I recorded, it could be garbage, but I was watching the gopro screen and tried to keep it on the bar being made)
If you send it to me, I can upload to the Glibs YouTube account and then you can embed it in a post here (or embed from your own YouTube or Vimeo). That makes it viewable elsewhere, and saves us storage space.
All right. It will be a few weeks (My laptop is nowhere near able to handle video editing, so it will be after I return to my desktop) But I’ll bring it up again then.
There’s a youtube account?
*searches*
Hmm, there really is!
We acquired it for several reasons, only one or two of which we use it for to date. I’d love to see more community-generated content there.
Not that the website product is the Glibertariat….
Reviewing the raw footage, and there’s a decent amount of usable material there.
Awesome!
Two field trips while I was in grade school were to local candy factories, one of which being the chocolate factory near my grade school. Both were really cool, and we got to see candy and chocolates being made.
At the chocolate factory, we walked past a stack of ten pound chocolate bars. All us kids were excited that chocolate came in ten pound bars! The guy giving us the tour said, “You won’t like them. That’s unsweetened chocolate.”
Your name isn’t Charlie Bucket is it?
No, sorry.
Not ten pounds, but Hershey’s does sell Five Pound finished bars.
Memorial Day.
God bless America!
I pledge allegiance to the flag…
Have some yoga pants.
http://archive.is/PNm6d
#15, please and thank you.
Orgy.
I’ll take #4 out for breakfast afterwards.
#11
Remember, kids, with the exception of this Glibertopia, “If the product is free, the product is me.”
Sure, SP. I believe ya.
I wondered when someone was going to question that assertion.
We produce the bulk of the sites content – for free.
In fact that’s what we’re doing now by commenting!
We’re trapped into providing content unless we abandon site!
*panics*
Shoot, you’ve stumbled on my nefarious plan! I could have gotten away with it, if it weren’t for you pesky government employees!
I like to think I contribute something. Well, two somethings.
Someone help me with the chain of logic:
if Glib.com is a not-for-profit, even if it’s fined, what can happen? The board isn’t responsible for its debts.
So “fuck off” and maybe some time in three or four years they might get someone to enforce a court order to close the site?
Or Glib could commingle its actions in a way that will satisfy progs who think libertarians are Nazis: link heavily to the NRA, the Klan, FauxNews, and the RNC, then move the offices to a poorly rangered national park somewhere in Oregon….progs would love that shite.
My concern was that non-compliance could be used as an excuse to shut the site since we are already “other.” The entire process for this (and the timelines) are unclear since there is a weaponized judicial branch, and I prefer to hedge our bets and stay under the radar as much as we can.
However, if it gets more obnoxious I do have Fuck Off Slaver contingency plans in place. Of which I will not say more until/if it becomes necessary.
Idaho retreat with “Death Hunt” style cabin-bunker?
What do I do with my orphans?
Will there be toilet paper?
How many points are deducted because I can’t shoot while wearing a monocle?
Diesel, propane, or gasoline chipper mill?
I didn’t realize I was so unprepared for this moment.
Let me put it this way: SP is very concerned with your privacy. Especially if some asshole like Preet comes sniffing around.
My wood chipper was lost in one of those boating accidents…
Meh, he can lick my tail. Although you mammals are so uncivilized. We would have just thrown him out of an airlock
If only gun owners would store their weapons securely
“They were in our house for eight minutes and got our safe out of our master bedroom,” said the woman.
In the video, you can see the men struggle with the 650-pound safe. Once in the driveway, the driver returns to help load the safe into the car.
“They were aware of how to do things, check the door for the sensors,” the homeowner said.
The stolen safe contained rifles, handguns, shotguns, jewelry, coin collections and silver bars.
Investigators said the same men are seen in surveillance video at a home burglarized on Sugarbush Drive a month earlier. It happened just after 4:30 p.m. on April 25 at a home in the 1000 block of Sugarbush Drive. The three suspects pulled into the driveway shortly after the homeowner had left his property.
After making sure no one was home, two of the suspects made their way into the backyard through a side gate. They were able to get inside the home after breaking a rear sliding glass door. The suspects got away with a Barska safe, rifles and several handguns.
I guess we need more common sense safe control.
I just can’t get over “Sugarbush.” This derp has reduced me to a twelve year old.
Sounds like someone neglected to bolt their safe to the floor/wall.
Thanks for this SP. I’ve been blitzed indeed and all of it is incomprehensible tech jargon-gibberish. I’m on blogger and simply ignore it. But my fear is Google suspending me and it’s not like Google has a 1-800 number where, heaven forbid, you can talk to a real human. Will my ignorance lead to problems you reckon?
Fuck the EU. Bunch of pain in the neck pansies.
With respect to the Brits around here.
Can we start our own internet?
Seems unfair: we were taxed to pay for this one already.
No, Google will have taken great pains to make sure that the Blogger platform is compliant so that it doesn’t become a door into the entire enterprise. Your content there will be safe and you shouldn’t have to do anything differently. This is not necessarily the case if you have an email list, however, depending on the service provider.
If Google should suspend you, just get in touch and I’ll set up a blog for you.
You’re awesome. I’ve been meaning to migrate because Google makes me nervous. I always worry if I say something bad about them they will knock on my door.
Do you recommend WP? I was on it years ago.
This site is run on WordPress. The platform is very user friendly. But use self-hosted (wordpress.org) with your own domain, NOT WordPress.com. You’ll pay about $10/month for hosting someplace (NEVER USE GODADDY FOR ANYTHING), but you control the content. If you are using it for your business, it’s really the only way to go.
I have had clients who neglected to have a website, in favor of having only a Facebook business page. I would NEVER let my online business identity be subject to the whims of Zuck et al. The clients became my clients when they needed help recovering from the nightmare outcomes of those bad decisions.
Just out of curiosity, why is this? Back when I did Internet marketing/SEO stuff, I remember a lot of people on forums (including myself) boycotted them because they supported SOPA/PIPA. Is that why?
That didn’t help. But, now, it’s because they are unprincipled con artists who rip people off. They make it impossible to transfer domains, they have “problems” where websites just disappear with no notice and there are no backups to be found. They continue to bill for services people cancel. On and on and on.
/trying not to rant
Gofuckdaddy.com
I’ve used Lunarpages for over a decade, and really like ’em. Everything I want and nothing I don’t, and their self-help front-end console just keeps getting incrementally better every year. What’s not to like?
*knock knock*
Rufus: “Who’s there?”
“Google”
Rufus: “Google who?”
“This is not some joke, we’re here to collect your soul and harvest your organs as per the terms and conditions.”
/Homer scream.
Don’t tell Suthenboy
Four people were killed when an 18-wheeler transporting avocados failed to slow down while approaching congestion on a Louisiana interstate and triggered a fiery pileup, police said Sunday.
Louisiana State Police shared details of the Saturday afternoon crash in a news release, saying that there was “traffic was stopped or slowing to a stop on I-12 east at LA 21 due to congestion.”
“An 18-wheeler, hauling avocados, was traveling in the right lane on I-12 approaching the traffic congestion,” police said. “For unknown reasons, the 18-wheeler was unable to stop and started a chain reaction crash with nine other vehicles. The 18-wheeler jackknifed during the crash and caught fire, along with three other vehicles.”
Avocados are bad, children. Mmmmkay.
Avocados don’t kill people.
People who don’t eat local kill people.
/prog
Avocados don’t kill people, people who eat local people kill people.
I told you those damned things were no good. They were already an assault on the senses but now we have no-shit assault avocados FFS.
My wife just informed me that she doesnt want her picture associated with my anti-avacado comments. She loves them.
“And if you loved me you would buy me one every once in a while”
Sorry. Looks like the supply will be short for a bit.
Have fun sleeping on the couch.
YOU WANNA BUY A COUCH OFF CRAIGSLIST?!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gpy4qv3BWLQ
No; no I don’t.
I love how the avocados were so important they mentioned them twice.
Watching Van Morrison Live at the Rainbow recently aired on PBS.
Morrison is awesome but man he has, like, no charisma.
I saw him live in Toronto around 1994. It was awful. He gave the impression he didn’t want to be there and played nothing but his jazz tunes. Thank God it only cost $30.
He gave the impression he didn’t want to be there
He knew you were there.
Thank God it only cost $30.
Which is like 27¢ US.
I always felt he was staring at just me that night.
Maybe it was the fumes from the joints two girls were smoking sitting in front of us and then shared it with us.
He at least played “Brown Eyed Girl” and “Moondance”, didn’t he? Because if not, total dick move.
If I’d gone to that show with a date, and he at least did those two, I could deal. If he was of the “I’m 64 years old, but I’m only playing my new shit” brigade, I’d have been livid.
I saw Neil Young on his “This Notes for You” tour, nothing but new stuff, finally for the encore he played Tonights the Night and Joe Walsh joined him and they jammed for like ten minutes, only thing that saved the show.
The Police came to Mtl a few years back a couple of us went. Terrible. Sting is another smug ‘too cool to perform for you’ type. They completely mangled ‘Roxanne’. It was atrocious.
ONE song in the entire catalogue you should not mess with, and they did.
It was the latter and he would have ruined your night. I was throughly disappointed.
No he didn’t. He *may* have done Moondance but if he did, it was a poor rendition. Definitely not Brown Eyed Girl. My buddy only came along because of us and said ‘as long as he sings BEG it’s worth it’. He didn’t. Dick move for sure in my view. Sorta like Mellnecamp not playing ‘Hurts so good’ for some reason. Annoying.
He has a rep for being cranky at his live performances.
So why tour and show such disrespect? Delicate genius my ass.
It’s the least you can do for your audience.
On the other hand, whenever the Stones or U2 come through Canada, their stuff’s been awesome. And I don’t even like either band.
I am getting old. Must be early onset dementia. Someone help me out. Which Reason writer tried to ruin a kid’s future career because of the silly sandwich joke?
Wasn’t that Elizabeth Nolan Brown?
Oh yes. Well they have two skinny girls with triple monikers attending cocktail parties and I get them mixed up.
How is “Robby Soave” a triple moniker?
Yes.
Markets in everything
The companies behind a video game called “Active Shooter” — in which players can pretend to be a shooter in a school environment — are facing backlash in the light of recent school shootings.
The game offers players the opportunity to play as either a SWAT team member or an active shooter in a school setting. In the active shooter setting, players kill police officers and civilians.
“Active Shooter’s” developer, Revived Games, reportedly plans on releasing another mode of play in which players can be civilians in the mass shooting as well.
———-
An anti-gun violence organization also condemned the game as being “in very bad taste” and “horrendous.”
“Why would anybody think it’s a good idea to market something violent like that, and be completely insensitive to the deaths of so many children?” Infer Trust told the BBC. “We’re appalled that the game is being marketed.”
When will we have common sense video game control?
“Why would anybody think it’s a good idea to market something violent like that…?”
Because now everyone knows who they are. You cant buy this kind of advertising. Also, irreverence sells well to their target audience. Ever hear of an outfit by the name of 4Chan?
It may prove to be a bonehead move if a school shooter is found to possess a copy of that game.
“Why would anybody think it’s a good idea to market something violent like that,”
Because it’s a good idea to tell people like you to fuck off, slaver.
Echoes of the GTA series, which are (mostly) awesome games.
Come to think of it, I need to get the latest one. And since these puerile douchebags are whining about “Active Shooter”, I might pick that up as well.
This you at the drive-thru?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A6g0mPo-uJM
No. I’d never get a large soda.
Best first person shooter ever was a game where you were in the book depository at Dealy Plaza as JFK’s car rolled by. I had no problem getting a higher body count than Oswald.
https://twitter.com/HewittLexy/status/1000511462425681921
WTF??
This is what happens when you give Baywatch police powers.
“See folks. This is what happens when you refuse to wait two hours after eating before going in the water. We’re doing this for your own good.”
Nice sideboob at :35.
WTF is also for the responses….
I bailed when it turned into a discussion of racism.
This problem will never be tempered until they stop making it about race, but they cant see that.
Seriously. The ones about blacks especially. Awful.
Thug in blue shirt hits woman in back of head twice while she is on the ground. And he went home safe and sound.
Poor Danica. Career ends with the Indy 168.
Infuriating
Fuck off slaver and Nothing.Left.To.Cut.
Also note that comments are disabled. Using that idiotic fed court ruling, should be forced to leave them turned on so they can get ridiculed for the idiot nannies that they are.
Cool link, bro.
https://youtu.be/stzrWDJ66MQ
I hope our Maryland Glibs are safe.
http://baltimore.cbslocal.com/2018/05/27/flash-flood-warning-issued-for-parts-of-maryland/
That looks pretty bad.
TW: autoplay
Yes. We were there a couple years ago and I was regaled with the stories of how Ellicott City has the downtown flooded like this often. And yet, people want to buy the charming historic homes and businesses right in the path of least resistance for the water to sweep through. Mind boggling.
Also, FFS people, don’t wade through flood waters or try to drive through. That’s how people die. And it puts the rescuers at risk, too.
Glibertarians.com HQ – Live Feed
Not.Clicking.
Do it.
Nope. And you can’t make me!
You’ll hear it in the background when OMWC clicks it.
She claims she didn’t. I don’t believe her, kids that age have better hearing than adults.
*nods sagely*
Now play this.
“This content is not available.”
Finally, Big Brother comes through!
God, I clicked and made the mistake of doing it with my daughter sitting behind me.
Thankfully she’s still innocent.
What are you, some kinda nut?
I KNOW!
She had earphones on….sooooo I got away with it.
Well, Giro is over. What a damn shame it wasn’t broadcast. It was one of the best races I’ve ever seen.
Real, hardcore racing.
That is, I caught large glimpses of it on RAI, cycling channels and kept up with it in the papers even though the main broadcasters didn’t carry it.
As I said above, I worked for a German company and surprisingly there were a lot of Germans and other EU types working there too.
NONE of them thought the GDPR was a bad idea. All of them supported it completely.
My favorite story is that they created an app to help organize various trade shows they put on globally. If you went to a trade show you could download the app and it would have the speaking schedules, an agenda and relevant links to presentations and what not. You could also register and get notifications pushed to you when various presentations were about to start, etc.
We did the first trade show using this app in 2016 in Chicago. After the first day a bunch of our German colleagues complained that the app was storing their data in North America (NOT the EU) which was a no-no. (Since the app had only been used in Germany before no one had caught this). So the poor app team had to stay up all night to turn out a new version that routed data according to the user’s profile.
Yes. Our own company people freaked that our company created an app that might not be GDPR compliant.
I’m so glad I don’t work there anymore.
I am so sorry you had to work with these people. Idiots, the lot of them.