Comment Re:American cable companies quietly bled... (Score -1) 104
Comment Re:American cable companies quietly bled... (Score -1) 104
Comment Re:American cable companies quietly bled... (Score -1) 104
This is really strange! Then, why is your user name on that list published on the intertubes?
You're a stalker and you keep a list of your victims. Remove my name and go away.
Comment Re:American cable companies quietly bled... (Score -1) 104
You obviously want people to try and find you. You seem to even want people to recognize you. What gives?
Yet creimer doesn't mention you in any of his tweets for months. I wonder why. Maybe he's not reading your shit?
Comment Re:American cable companies quietly bled... (Score -1) 104
Comment Re:American cable companies quietly bled... (Score -1) 104
Hey that creamierpie guy!
Nope. Creimer left Slashdot months ago. Move along. Nothing to see here.
Comment American cable companies quietly bled... (Score -1) 104
Comment Re:Microsoft Teams sucks (Score -1) 75
Comment Huh... (Score 0) 71
Comment Funny... (Score 0) 98
Comment Remember kids... (Score -1) 126
Submission + - Writing Google Reviews About Patients is Actually A HIPAA Violation (theverge.com) 1
In the past few years, the phrase 'HIPAA violation' has been thrown around a lot, often incorrectly. People have cited the law, which protects patient health information, as a reason they can’t be asked if they’re vaccinated or get a doctor’s note for an employer.
But asking someone if they’re vaccinated isn’t actually a HIPAA violation. That’s a fine and not-illegal thing for one non-doctor to ask another non-doctor. What is a HIPAA violation is what U. Phillip Igbinadolor, a dentist in North Carolina, did in September 2015, according to the Department of Health and Human Services. After a patient left an anonymous, negative Google review, he logged on and responded with his own post on the Google page, saying that the patient missed scheduled appointments. [...]
In the post, he used the patient’s full name and described, in detail, the specific dental problem he was in for: “excruciating pain” from the lower left quadrant, which resulted in a referral for a root canal.
That’s what a HIPAA violation actually looks like.
Comment Re:What movies? (Score -1) 249
On the other hand, what probably *IS* dying is people going to a theater and paying absurd prices for everything, from the tickets to the food and drinks.
I pay $25/month for an AMC A-List subscription and see a movie every week. That's $6.25 per week. I don't get any food or drinks.