foreign intelligence partners … will curtail what they share with the US
Wouldn’t be surprised if domestic intelligence agencies start curtailing what they share. The fact is that a TS/SCI isn’t that hard to get, if you aren’t a complete fuck up. And even folks who have been a complete fuck up in the past can still get one, if they stopped being a fuck up long enough ago. That many of the folks in Trump’s cabinet would be denied a clearance speaks to the level of fuck uppery that they have been up to recently. Gonna be an interesting four years with the Felon in Chief.
When we finished our basement, I had the electrician run two Cat-6 cables to a box right by every outlet and back to a single point. I had to terminate and punch everything down. But, now I have Ethernet throughout the basement.
Totally worth it.
Not to mention many troops still have an emphasis on Christianity. Though it’s slightly less mandatory than it used to be.
Traders: Gib free monies!
They will give any excuse that can gin up to return to the days of the Fed basically giving out free money that they can go gamble with. The effects on the broader economy be damned.
Just waiting for MAGA idiots to start buying EVs to “own the libs”. I mean, I’d rather people shift to EVs because it’s less damaging to the environment; but, a win is a win, I guess.
Can’t say I’m surprised. Been using Wiz for a short while and it really fills in a lot of gaps left by teams going to “The Cloud”. It seems like devs working in cloud environments all forgot that security is a thing and so we get an absolute shit-show of misconfigured containers, networks, K8s clusters, etc. Add to that Google, AWS and Azure all seeming to treat security as an afterthought as well, and organizations need a Wiz or something like it to trawl through the cesspool and point out, “hey, maybe you should update that Wordpress plugin with several known RCE CVEs.”
The long and short of the current state of cloud security reminds me an awful lot of the early 2000’s view of on-prem security. People just throw up firewalls (excuse me, VPS configurations) and call it a day. Once the attack gets past the edge (and they always get past the edge) visibility and response actions fall off a cliff. We’re at a point where we need EDR and NDR for the cloud; but, there isn’t much in that space yet. Wiz is one of the options and I can see Google wanting to own a piece of that growing pie.
This appears to be the bill.
The House vote had 3 Nays (surprise, surprise, all Republicans)
The Senate passed it via Unanimous Consent. So, no roll call vote.
Languages shift and change over time. English, as we currently know it, has undergone several such shifts, to the point that it’s less a language and more several languages dressed up in a trench coat pretending to be one. Adding more Spanish words to the language is really just a continuation of a centuries old trend.
Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) said last month. “I think a lot of these cases [will] work up, and the Supreme Court finally says enough is enough, we’re not a banana republic.”
I really hope they do Senator. In a Banana Republic, the Glorious Leader is usually not held to account for his crimes. In the US and in functional Republics, we actually hold people to account for the crimes they commit, regardless of their current or former positions. Trump committed a crime, being a former President doesn’t mean he can’t be held to account.
The advantage of having officers carry malpractice insurance is the same as it is with doctors. Eventually, the premiums to insure a bad officer get so high, no one is willing to pay them. Or, they simply uninsurable, as no company is willing to take on the risk. It also means there will be a large and politically connected organization (insurance companies) which have a financial interest in collecting data on bad police officers. Sure, that should be the government’s job, but since we know that’s not happening, why not exploit corporate greed for a positive thing?
Food tracks the general inflation closely
That’s a fine bit of bit circular logic there. The price of food is used in the BLS’s basket of goods for calculating the Consumer Price Index (CPI). So yes, the goods used to track inflation do, in fact, track with inflation.
That said, the US economy (at a macro level) is doing rather well considering that we weathered a global pandemic, we have a war on in Europe involving one of the world’s major oil and gas suppliers and inflation has been stubbornly high. Yet somehow, wages are up and unemployment is at historic lows. Seriously, if the administration could actually do something about the housing situation and prices rising, this election would look a lot more like 2008 than 2016. But unfortunately, people vote based on how they feel, not on an analysis of macro-economics. So long as people fell like the gains they have made are being squeezed back out of them via rising prices, the incumbent president is in trouble. When you get down to it, it’s still the economy, stupid.
Amen.
I was one day a week in the office during the pandemic. We had assets which required a physical presence, but with a rotating shift of 1-2 people in the office each day, we could keep the required coverage. Then my workplace started bringing us back to the office in 2022. It started with 3 days a week and we started hearing rumors of a full return to office. It was well know that upper management was hostile to remote work. So, I flipped my LinkedIn profile to “looking” (or whatever the setting was called, it’s been a while). And I started both actively applying and responding to recruiters. I eventually got a message from a reciter who led with “REMOTE WORK OPPORTUNITY”, yes the message started in ALL CAPS, though the rest was normal and hit all the points I was interested in. I figured, what the hell, can’t hurt to talk. That was just shy of two years ago, I have been into an office since late 2022. It’s going to have to be a hell of a bad situation for me to deal with commuting again.
I got my mile down to 23 min and I’m proud of the improvement from where I was
And that really is great for you. I wish you all the best in seeking to better yourself.
But, a 15 minute mile is a fast walking pace. And when talking about police officers, I’d expect a bit more fitness than “I don’t die of a heart attack when faced with a flight of stairs”. Sure, I recognize that they are more likely to use a radio to outrun a suspect (and that’s how it should work); but, they are also somewhat likely to face situations where physical exertion is expected.
Just had to call this one out:
… Maria “Maki” Haberfeld, chair of the Department of Law, Police Science and Criminal Justice Administration at John Jay College of Criminal Justice said. “It’s not about tattoos or running a mile in 15 minutes. …”
If it takes you 15 minutes to “run” a mile, you aren’t actually running.
Even more important that the one time bump is the very last line of the article:
Starting July 1, 2027, the rule requires Labor to adjust the salary threshold every three years to account for updated wage data.
Rather than having to fight for these things every few years, we need to just tie minimum wage and the overtime floor to CPI. But, that’s something the GOP will fight tooth and nail.
Seems like the Biden Administration has been trying to speed run the “good ideas” list as we move into election season. This is a great change. The bullshit “refund” system airlines have been using needed killing. We had a family trip get canceled due to the pandemic and ended up with a “credit” from the airline which had a laundry list of restrictions on it, making it very difficult to use. If I pay a company money for a service and they fail to provide that service, there should be no situation under which they are allowed to keep my money.
On the other piece of this, it will be nice to see baggage fees up front. I’m probably weird in that I don’t mind paying per checked bag. Most of my travel is with my family and we really don’t need a checked bag per person. So, I’d rather pay a bit less for the tickets and pay for the bags we do need separately. At the same time, I’d absolutely love to have that cost be considered when I am searching for flights.
You stock 16 shelves,
and what do you get?
Relevant to the article is the US Limitation of Liability Act of 1851. This law allows a company to limit their total liability to the value of the ship and cargo. It’s a leftover from a different age where the US Government was trying to promote trade. Today, it’s used by companies to shirk liability when their greed and lack of care leads to death and destruction.
So, he finally took Andrew Llyod Webber’s advice from Jesus Christ Superstar and popped into the age of mass communication.