Boule: Vanity Fair and Spam Accessibility
Boule: Vanity Fair and SEO Spam Accessibility by D. Diederot Boule, n. French; a ball. Coll. used to refer to a little surprise gift; a pleasant discovery; a small, delightful thing. Web … read me
Boule: Vanity Fair and SEO Spam Accessibility by D. Diederot Boule, n. French; a ball. Coll. used to refer to a little surprise gift; a pleasant discovery; a small, delightful thing. Web … read me
The art of english language buttressing; three rights make yet a left.
Russians, resolutions, and the English Language At least when the enterprise of reputation is concerned, multiple member nations have outed themselves as fine patrons of linguistic subtleties. Feigned or otherwise, this author … read me
Preface Five tiles of gray flip left over right; a graceful reveal of each letter beneath. Yellow encourages, green offers dopamine. Open each day with a reliable word—crate, crane, lane. Cover the … read me
If we continue to so stubbornly insist on the usage of static, irrelative terms, we might as well start saying,
“Your state of being in retirement from the company or observation of others is important to us.”
The problem is one of language. Privacy is a state of being. Adhering to the idea that somehow a “privacy policy” can properly operate as a legal contingency in a public space is foolish.
Radar indicates a that this legal maelstrom of chicken will not dissapate within any certain forecastable period.
Let’s stop being little itty bitty babies about it.
Don’t take it personally, but recently proposed Bills from the 117th Congress beg the question, can you, to a consistent effect, define “personal information”?