Sounds like corporate media ignoring Microsoft when it comes to widespread botnets and all the spam, DoS, espionage and other crime so enabled.
In August, 2008, the embassy noted that China was in the process of building 50 to 60 new nuclear plants by 2020. This target – which has since increased – was a huge business opportunity [and pushed Westinghouse design]. ... The biggest potential bottleneck is human resources – coming up with enough trained personnel to build and operate all of these new plants, as well as regulate the industry.
They can have competent people but it won't matter if none of them can blow the whistle.
the good news is, while any big, social or economic grassroots movement is a "marathon", so to speak, we are witnessing big change over the last couple of years.
Organic farming and food preparation are good matches but all sorts of small businesses can take advantage of all the good people on the market.
It was Gramm who could make the plan a financial reality ... a new package of complex assets for speculators to gamble on. Corporations had been using mass purchases of life insurance policies on their employees for years as part of an elaborate tax avoidance scheme (the government doesn't tax insurance premiums or death benefits). The employees themselves ... received no benefit. Only the companies who bought the policies would receive payouts when these "peasants" died. ... a gruesome combination of what are now regarded as two of the most infamous Wall Street scams on record.
US law appropriately limits what ads may be shown to US consumers.
He also ">tells us how wonderful Bing and Windows are.
Much of my work for Microsoft does indeed speak to advertising fraud. Microsoft must make sure Bing doesn't show ads for scams, that fraudsters don't use the Microsoft DRIVEpm ad network, that Windows Defender properly detects spyware/adware, etc. I've worked with Microsoft on these kinds of matters.
Ali Soufan is a long-time FBI agent and interrogator who was at the center of the U.S. government's counter-terrorism activities ... the CIA is barring the publication of vast amounts of information in his book including, as Scott Shane details in The New York Times today, many facts that are not remotely secret and others that have been publicly available for years, including ones featured in the 9/11 Report and even in Soufan's own public Congressional testimony.
We believe all of the plaintiffs in the cases against Cisco Systems are taking great risks through their involvement in the lawsuits. Recently, Du Daobin’s attorney published a blog noting that his client had been detained and interrogated at length by senior officials from China’s Ministry of Public Security about his role in Du v. Cisco. Mr. Du and the other plaintiffs are currently at risk of further torture, imprisonment, or even "disappearance."
Self torture of this sort only adds to the misery.
Did You Say “Intellectual Property”? It's a Seductive Mirage