That's over 86 per hour. Over one per minute if one was texting 24 hours a day.
There's no two ways around it -- this lady's cray cray. That's not normal. I wouldn't expect a woman texting Brad Pitt in his prime to be sending 2000 text messages a day. I wouldn't expect a woman texting Robert Pattinson immediately after Twilight came out to be sending 2000 messages per day. That's acting on a compulsion that shows a total breakdown of self-control at a basic level. Not only could she not inhibit this obviously bad behavior, but she kept on returning to it again and again and again over such a long period of time.
She can cry all she wants in court, but anyone who's been on the receiving end of that level of nuts knows it changes a man (or in this case, a boy) forever. You never forget that feeling of being hunted by a rabid animal who just wants to express pure unfiltered id. "I am going to take what I want whenever I want even if it means you can't even touch your phone anymore because it's beeping all day every day with my insane messages. I don't care about you or the consequences." -- you probably don't see messages from your friends and family anymore, because your notifications are filled up and your phone is constantly buzzing, and so when you're facing constant notifications the system is basically useless. That has social and practical consequences.
@sj_zero @leespringfield1903 Yeah.
A fair amount of this coincides with the Gates -> Ballmer transition. The stuff and pace you're impressed with was Gates or started under him, as well as the OS/2 work. Which had Microsoft despairing because IBM demanded it work on a 286 because they'd promised their corporate IT disciples after all the first generation PC chaos the PC-IT would be the last PC they'd have to buy for a long time.
So Microsoft continued its Windows work, which became practical with the 386, and when DEC's Ken Olsen canceled both the hardware and OS work for a RISC replacement of the VAX Microsoft took the opportunity to hire a proven OS team headed by one of the very few men who'd ever done more than one OS. Who later did foundational low level OS type work for Azure, can't keep a man like Cutler down it would seem.
Once your org chart really and truly looks like this thanks to stack ranking, it's a miracle if anything gets done, see them blowing a billion dollars on the Kin. Although the pajeet replacement might be making people nostalgic for even a botch like Windows 8??? I mean, one of the first things he did was fire most of the people who tested Windows, especially the complete experience team....
Probably not an actual quote. Probably.
I mean, Microsoft made NT, made the 9x line, ended the 9x line, and even participated in the os/2 project, and all in less time than they've had to make 8 work. If you look at it that way it looks even worse.
They just can't do it.
Just think about how based and Chadlt the old Microsoft developers were: they went from Windows 3.1 to Windows 95 in 5 years. They went from Windows 95 Windows 2000 in another 4 years.
I do not believe for a second that given nine years the Microsoft of today could go from Windows 3.1 to Windows 2000. We're still basically running Windows 8 lite.
Canada's economy shrinks by 0.3%
https://financialpost.com/news/economy/canada-economy-shrinks-october?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Posted into Financial News @financial-news-NationalPost
We need to get rid of that red Tory in charge and get a mike Harris back.
Imagine how insane it is to pay yourself to convince yourself to do something that you want to do. I can't imagine anything much more wasteful.
There was one early case involving compuserve, and because that server and didn't moderate editorial, they were treated like a newsstand that sells newspapers other people published, and so CompuServe was not liable for the individual things written by the posters. By contrast, There was a case involving Prodigy I think, where the service claimed to be moderated and thus safer for young people to go on to. This opened them up to liability because they asserted editorial moderation and some of the content they allowed through was found to be defamatory. Therefore, the state of the internet prior to section 230 was this: limited editorial moderation which limited liability for the things said, or editorial moderation where the website provider took on the liability for the things that were posted and also took on liability for damages when they moderate.
If suction 230 were to be removed, this would be the way things would go back to. Legally, if you never made any pretenses of moderation, you would be protected from the individual things that people post. And if you did choose to moderate, you would be personally responsible for everything that was posted on your website.
This is why a lot of free speech people were pushing for the abolishment of section 230 altogether, because at that point either everything becomes usenet again and largely unmoderated for editorial, for what remains becomes so fully locked down it would no longer be interactive. In other words, individuals who believe that abolishing section 230 would result in moderation that they like becoming the norm are likely incorrect. The more likely result would be that once section 230 was removed, remaining services that didn't immediately lock down would not have any editorial controls at all.
But I should tell you that if you are on the political left, there's an awful lot of stuff that would immediately get taken down because no company would want to potentially be treated as the speaker of a lot of that speech. In particular, accusations that a certain company did X or that a certain individual did Y would almost certainly be banned out right because the company's running the platforms would not want to be "saying" such things in court.
Of course on the political right there would be a lot of stuff taken down too, but not the stuff most lefties would want. Legally, there's generally nothing wrong with what is called hate speech, at least not in the United States. Therefore, we're talking about a certain company dumping talk to chemicals into a river maybe actionable defamation and therefore might be moderated, or making statements of fact about a certain politician maybe actionable defamation and therefore might be moderated, you can legally talk about your opinions on different races all day long.
A lot of politically neutral services would likely be up in the air as well. Things like recommendation algorithms or monetization decisions could have to change to accommodate the elimination of section 230 and the resulting legal regime.