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Submission + - Man Arrested For Posting Photos To Facebook

EzInKy writes: A Louisville man has been arrested after police say he was posting explicit photos of his girlfriend on social media. Police say 32-year-old James Dewitt was dating a woman for a couple of weeks and unbeknownst to her, he was taking sexual photos of her and posting them online. It's nice to see a win for those on side of privacy, especially in a world where so many think nothing of respecting the rights of others before they post to social media sites. Does anyone else side with me in believing that the time he spends behind bars should be limited by only the length it takes to remove these images from the internet?

Comment First off, are zero plays... (Score 1) 305

...considered a plus or a minus? I think that would be good starting point to consider what is fair and what is not. For example, if a song expects $1,000,000 per play and get zero plays then that song nets $0. A song netting $0.0001 per play that is played 1 time obviously out performs the song played 0 times as far as returns per songs played is concerned.

Fuck it, that makes no sense. It is the cocksuckers counting tenths of pennies per play who are keeping the rest of us from having anything nice.

Comment Out Sonying Sony? (Score 3, Insightful) 153

Is this really what Samsung wants to do? I've been steering everyone I know away from Sony products for more than a decade now, and what I suggest when they ask what brand they can trust I have always told them Samsung. I ask you, is there any major brand who are on the side of consumer/customer privacy out there anymore?

Comment For us normal folk... (Score 1) 18

...open hardware could prevent us from paying exorbiant prices for decent performance and allow us to get the full value out of the hardware we invest in. I had to allow scripts from "academia-assests.com" to view the text of the first link if anyone else runs into the same blank page I did when I clicked on it.

Comment It is only logical... (Score 1) 224

...that banks are 100% liable in cases such as this. It is up to them to verify that any access to the accounts that they hold are made by the legitimate account holders. Seriously, think of what the world would be like if any yahoo could write a check against any account without them veryifying the authenticity of the signature.

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