Comment Re:"Pretty please, don't scrape me" (Score 1) 19
Some of them *use* robots.txt to find out what to scrape.
You can put tripwires in there and feed logs to fail2ban, for instance.
Some of them *use* robots.txt to find out what to scrape.
You can put tripwires in there and feed logs to fail2ban, for instance.
All the other articles are just reporters rambling.
Or leaks.
Unfortunately, since the sourcing is usually an opaque "source with knowledge," leaks are rarely known about, even when reported on.
And sources with knowledge are often a mechanic whose brother once worked in the same building as the events. Or for example if an article on the FBI cites a "source with knowledge of law enforcement procedures" it is probably a retired deputy sheriff from Bumpinville who doesn't know shit about FBI procedures.
If they cite a person with knowledge of an engineering capability, it's actually somebody's cousin who is listed in the rollodex as "went to engineering school," but actually flunked out, and is always telling everybody he knows more than those stupid "pencilnecks with their clipboards." And that person either tells them "it's impossible," or "everybody'll have that in ten years."
Quarters reported now will still be part of stock research later.
In fact, the current data is mostly useless without the historical data for context.
there are lots of those, often with their own "store." I find batteries like that a lot.
But this was explicitly a Walmart listing, by Walmart, rather than a 3d party listing.
I recently read that the sales price is $105M but the lifetime maintenance cost is budgeted at $300M.
yeah, that's why SCOTUS was not given Judicial Review powers in the Constitution and just declared fifteen years later that it had that ultimate power "because we have to".
The Legislature is supposed to manage this nonsense. It has been in a coma since 1995.
The way I read it, the 100k fee is an "investment" in bringing someone over.
You pay it when you get someone in, and it gets recovered over the 3 years that the H-1B is active. Don't know if you have to then fork over another 100k, or if the +3 rollover is covered under the original 100k. After 6 years, presumably the applicant is well on their way to applying for permanent residency, or they've had enough of living in the US and want to go home.
If amortized over 3 years, that's 34k/yr, if over 6 years, that's 17k/yr. Not peanuts, but not an obscene amount of money either.
This would basically be a tariff on foreign workers, I guess? And to your point, yes, it should be indexed to something that doesn't require endless political wrangling to keep at a reasonable market value. At least tie it to inflation, or maybe to a number reflective of the number of US workers attempting to find jobs in the given field...
https://www.theregister.com/20...
"The H-1B program was created in 1990, and presently allocates 85,000 spots annually for temporary non-immigrant workers to come to the US â" ostensibly to fill gaps in the American labor force. Counting other exemptions like those afforded academic institutions, the program awards about 130,000 visas per year to foreign workers, and renews about 300,000 previously awarded visas â" which typically last for three years and can be extended for another three.
The process works as follows: Eligible H-1B applicants, or companies representing them, register to enter the H-1B cap lottery. Some 20,000 advanced degree petitions and 65,000 general petitions get selected. For selected registrants, employers can submit H-1B petitions on behalf of prospective employees. USCIS then processes the selected petitions and those approved can then come and work in the US.
Previously, employers submitted completed H-1B petitions in March and USCIS conducted its H1-B cap lottery at the end of that month to determine which petitions would be processed for the 85,000 slots."
Given its small size it might be better to land a small mining module on the rock and then carve it up in situ to expand that module into a small space station.
We need to do this with the Taurus cluster to prevent another Tunguska event, but better to start small and practice closer. It's so much more profitable to not lift mass from Earth than it is to send it down.
Taurus has enough asteroids to build Space Station Alpha. Might be a nice vacation spot.
What if it's 299,792.458 km?
Do we send the SYN-ACK?
It's not just amazon.
I ordered a thermostat for my mustang last week. It was described as "sold and shipped by Walmart."
A couple of days later, I found an Autozone box on my porch. And not just the box, but the shipping return address was to auto zone!
??
the real tragedy of Viet Nam was that the US achieved *exactly* what it set out to do--which was a really stupid thing to do and waste lives upon.
The mission was *not* to defeat the north Vietnamese, but to keep them on their side of an imaginary line. US troops that went over the line got called back.
When the US finally decided it wanted to stop playing, the north wouldn't let them simply leave. To get them to talk, the US bombed them into submission, for crying out loud.
By any *military* standard, Viet nam was an overwhelming success for the US. US troops controlled whatever ground they chose, and won all of the battles.
But "resist aggression and stay on your side of the line" is a *stupid*, even criminal, thing to ask of a military. As is the lives it through away for idiocy.
It's surprising that the suicided whistleblower didn't leave an insurance file.
Or did he?
> Isn't capitalism great?
Capitalism doesn't let you buy laws, that's Corporatism, a subset of Fascism, which is in turn a subset of Socialism.
A proper Capitalist systems speaks to economics, not poltiics.
Reconstruction US, Post-Mao China, Post-Soviet Russia all embraced capitalist economics to lift the vast majority of their population out of abject poverty.
Societies which did the opposite mostly killed their middle class ans then half the population starved to death.
This one is rather significant.
I wonder which private repos were made public. This could be the main prize. Industrial espionage ops?
Having lived through the Dot-Bomb it's basically the same.
You're not going to get a valuation bubble without a hype bubble. And nobody is buying companies for that much who have zero infrastructure. And the stock price is what they use to buy the infrastructure.
These are inextricably linked, not separate phenomena.
This is what Austrian Economists call the 'malinvestment' part of the business cycle. It's caused by artificially cheap money (not set by a market) and will unavoidably be cleared.
Our Orwell is so strong the eggheads artificially setting the price of money call themselves "The Open Market Committee". Because an open market in lending rates is de facto prohibited.
What this country needs is a good five cent ANYTHING!