Tag Archive | "sector"

Could Everyone’s Emails Even Deleted Emails Be Sold For Commercial Purposes?


I use to have a gmail account for years, but recently closed my account. I was waiting for years for gmail to change labels to folders. Finally, I wanted to know what Google knows about design that no one else knows. So I looked at everything from countries that read right to left to Feng Shui. I needed to find the element that I was missing to this puzzle.
I sat at my desk and started to pretended to be a Google Software Engineer and I imagined at my desk two draws one had folders and one had labels. I mentally ran through every physical scenario I could come up with. In every scenario clearly humans would pick the draw with folders. Then I thought maybe these Google Software Engineers are so far off the chart intelligent that even in physical movement it’s secondary to them. Sitting there I imagined being so smart that I could get any file with a label in the draw using only my mind. What struck me as odd is that no matter what, I would want a base category. Because without a base category things would not make cognitive sense to a human. Then it dawned on me the user is the base category in gmail and they are databasing users, I closed my account.
I like many others users used one password for all my online accounts wanting to close the door on gmail I changed my email to yahoo and made my email password different than all my other online passwords. Because if my email password is the same as the rest of my online accounts then Google could access my other accounts without detection. 60 days after closing my gmail account I need to open my account to reset a utility password. But gmail NEVER reopens a gmail account after closing the account. Warning bells where going off at this point. As time goes on Google would attract fewer and fewer users and advertising revenue would be in a constant decline also as time goes on. Where is the benefit then? Not allowing an email name to ever be used again protects the database, because if another user opens a closed gmail account it destroys two database records.
Overview
Google maintains a database of search results forever.
Gmail never reopens closed gmail accounts.
Gmail uses labels not folders.
Database Labels
Label IP Addresses: Home IP, work IP and other IP access points.
Label IP Physical Location: Country, State, City
Label Function: Government Sector, Strategic Sector, Private Sector
Label Name: Your First Name, Your Last Name
Label Email Accounts: Emails coolname@gmail.com (Closed email account), not-so-cool-name@gmail.com (Re…‡ Intact)
Label Emails: Inbound and Outbound
Label Searches: Websites visited
The database server could categories one by gmail account, IP and Google searches. When you delete an email the database server does not, when you close you gmail account the database matches it with your new gmail account by IP. And all of you search results are matched by IP to your database profile. Even if you never open another gmail account the database can continue to database someone by their IP address.
Businesses doing research would not even benefit from such individualistic information, because they look at market sectors and/or target markets. Further, businesses would not want old data in their research results, because it would give a false positive. Who could possible benefit from this data? A foreign or domestic Intelligence Agency?
It does not seem in the best interest of the Nation to allow a business to maintain such records, the records could be sold or stolen by a foreign nation.
Movie: The Core
Taz ‘Rat’ Finch: How many languages do you speak? 
Dr. Conrad Zimsky: Five, actually. 
Taz ‘Rat’ Finch: Well, I speak one… One Zero One Zero Zero. With that I could steal your money, your secrets, your sexual fantasies, your whole life. Any country, any place, any time I want.

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Could Everyone’s Emails Even Deleted Emails Be Sold For Commercial Purposes?


I use to have a gmail account for years, but recently closed my account. I was waiting for years for gmail to change labels to folders. Finally, I wanted to know what Google knows about design that no one else knows. So I looked at everything from countries that read right to left to Feng Shui. I needed to find the element that I was missing to this puzzle.
I sat at my desk and started to pretended to be a Google Software Engineer and I imagined at my desk two draws one had folders and one had labels. I mentally ran through every physical scenario I could come up with. In every scenario clearly humans would pick the draw with folders. Then I thought maybe these Google Software Engineers are so far off the chart intelligent that even in physical movement it’s secondary to them. Sitting there I imagined being so smart that I could get any file with a label in the draw using only my mind. What struck me as odd is that no matter what, I would want a base category. Because without a base category things would not make cognitive sense to a human. Then it dawned on me the user is the base category in gmail and they are databasing users, I closed my account.
I like many others users used one password for all my online accounts wanting to close the door on gmail I changed my email to yahoo and made my email password different than all my other online passwords. Because if my email password is the same as the rest of my online accounts then Google could access my other accounts without detection. 60 days after closing my gmail account I need to open my account to reset a utility password. But gmail NEVER reopens a gmail account after closing the account. Warning bells where going off at this point. As time goes on Google would attract fewer and fewer users and advertising revenue would be in a constant decline also as time goes on. Where is the benefit then? Not allowing an email name to ever be used again protects the database, because if another user opens a closed gmail account it destroys two database records.
Overview
Google maintains a database of search results forever.
Gmail never reopens closed gmail accounts.
Gmail uses labels not folders.
Database Labels
Label IP Addresses: Home IP, work IP and other IP access points.
Label IP Physical Location: Country, State, City
Label Function: Government Sector, Strategic Sector, Private Sector
Label Name: Your First Name, Your Last Name
Label Email Accounts: Emails coolname@gmail.com (Closed email account), not-so-cool-name@gmail.com (Re…‡ Intact)
Label Emails: Inbound and Outbound
Label Searches: Websites visited
The database server could categories one by gmail account, IP and Google searches. When you delete an email the database server does not, when you close you gmail account the database matches it with your new gmail account by IP. And all of you search results are matched by IP to your database profile. Even if you never open another gmail account the database can continue to database someone by their IP address.
Businesses doing research would not even benefit from such individualistic information, because they look at market sectors and/or target markets. Further, businesses would not want old data in their research results, because it would give a false positive. Who could possible benefit from this data? A foreign or domestic Intelligence Agency?
It does not seem in the best interest of the Nation to allow a business to maintain such records, the records could be sold or stolen by a foreign nation.
Movie: The Core
Taz ‘Rat’ Finch: How many languages do you speak? 
Dr. Conrad Zimsky: Five, actually. 
Taz ‘Rat’ Finch: Well, I speak one… One Zero One Zero Zero. With that I could steal your money, your secrets, your sexual fantasies, your whole life. Any country, any place, any time I want.

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Could Everyone’s Emails Even Deleted Emails Be Sold For Commercial Purposes?


I use to have a gmail account for years, but recently closed my account. I was waiting for years for gmail to change labels to folders. Finally, I wanted to know what Google knows about design that no one else knows. So I looked at everything from countries that read right to left to Feng Shui. I needed to find the element that I was missing to this puzzle.
I sat at my desk and started to pretended to be a Google Software Engineer and I imagined at my desk two draws one had folders and one had labels. I mentally ran through every physical scenario I could come up with. In every scenario clearly humans would pick the draw with folders. Then I thought maybe these Google Software Engineers are so far off the chart intelligent that even in physical movement it’s secondary to them. Sitting there I imagined being so smart that I could get any file with a label in the draw using only my mind. What struck me as odd is that no matter what, I would want a base category. Because without a base category things would not make cognitive sense to a human. Then it dawned on me the user is the base category in gmail and they are databasing users, I closed my account.
I like many others users used one password for all my online accounts wanting to close the door on gmail I changed my email to yahoo and made my email password different than all my other online passwords. Because if my email password is the same as the rest of my online accounts then Google could access my other accounts without detection. 60 days after closing my gmail account I need to open my account to reset a utility password. But gmail NEVER reopens a gmail account after closing the account. Warning bells where going off at this point. As time goes on Google would attract fewer and fewer users and advertising revenue would be in a constant decline also as time goes on. Where is the benefit then? Not allowing an email name to ever be used again protects the database, because if another user opens a closed gmail account it destroys two database records.
Overview
Google maintains a database of search results forever.
Gmail never reopens closed gmail accounts.
Gmail uses labels not folders.
Database Labels
Label IP Addresses: Home IP, work IP and other IP access points.
Label IP Physical Location: Country, State, City
Label Function: Government Sector, Strategic Sector, Private Sector
Label Name: Your First Name, Your Last Name
Label Email Accounts: Emails coolname@gmail.com (Closed email account), not-so-cool-name@gmail.com (Re…‡ Intact)
Label Emails: Inbound and Outbound
Label Searches: Websites visited
The database server could categories one by gmail account, IP and Google searches. When you delete an email the database server does not, when you close you gmail account the database matches it with your new gmail account by IP. And all of you search results are matched by IP to your database profile. Even if you never open another gmail account the database can continue to database someone by their IP address.
Businesses doing research would not even benefit from such individualistic information, because they look at market sectors and/or target markets. Further, businesses would not want old data in their research results, because it would give a false positive. Who could possible benefit from this data? A foreign or domestic Intelligence Agency?
It does not seem in the best interest of the Nation to allow a business to maintain such records, the records could be sold or stolen by a foreign nation.
Movie: The Core
Taz ‘Rat’ Finch: How many languages do you speak? 
Dr. Conrad Zimsky: Five, actually. 
Taz ‘Rat’ Finch: Well, I speak one… One Zero One Zero Zero. With that I could steal your money, your secrets, your sexual fantasies, your whole life. Any country, any place, any time I want.

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Look At Everything We Accomplished?


1. Passed Health Care Reform: After five presidents over a century failed to create universal health insurance, signed the Affordable Care Act (2010). It will cover 32 million uninsured Americans beginning in 2014 and mandates a suite of experimental measures to cut health care cost growth, the number one cause of America’s long-term fiscal problems.
2. Passed the Stimulus: Signed $787 billion American Recovery and Reinvestment Act in 2009 to spur economic growth amid greatest recession since the Great Depression. Weeks after stimulus went into effect, unemployment claims began to subside. Twelve months later, the private sector began producing more jobs than it was losing, and it has continued to do so for twenty-three straight months, creating a total of nearly 3.7 million new private-sector jobs.
3. Passed Wall Street Reform: Signed the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (2010) to re-regulate the financial sector after its practices caused the Great Recession. The new law tightens capital requirements on large banks and other financial institutions, requires derivatives to be sold on clearinghouses and exchanges, mandates that large banks provide “living wills” to avoid chaotic bankruptcies, limits their ability to trade with customers’ money for their own profit, and creates the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (now headed by Richard Cordray) to crack down on abusive lending products and companies.
4. Ended the War in Iraq: Ordered all U.S. military forces out of the country. Last troops left on December 18, 2011.
5. Began Drawdown of War in Afghanistan: From a peak of 101,000 troops in June 2011, U.S. forces are now down to 91,000, with 23,000 slated to leave by the end of summer 2012. According to Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta, the combat mission there will be over by next year.
6. Eliminated Osama bin laden: In 2011, ordered special forces raid of secret compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan, in which the terrorist leader was killed and a trove of al-Qaeda documents was discovered.
7. Turned Around U.S. Auto Industry: In 2009, injected $62 billion in federal money (on top of $13.4 billion in loans from the Bush administration) into ailing GM and Chrysler in return for equity stakes and agreements for massive restructuring. Since bottoming out in 2009, the auto industry has added more than 100,000 jobs. In 2011, the Big Three automakers all gained market share for the first time in two decades. The government expects to lose $16 billion of its investment, less if the price of the GM stock it still owns increases.
8. Recapitalized Banks: In the midst of financial crisis, approved controversial Treasury Department plan to lure private capital into the country’s largest banks via “stress tests” of their balance sheets and a public-private fund to buy their “toxic” assets. Got banks back on their feet at essentially zero cost to the government.
9. Repealed “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell”: Ended 1990s-era restriction and formalized new policy allowing gays and lesbians to serve openly in the military for the first time.
10. Toppled Moammar Gaddafi: In March 2011, joined a coalition of European and Arab governments in military action, including air power and naval blockade, against Gaddafi regime to defend Libyan civilians and support rebel troops. Gaddafi’s forty-two-year rule ended when the dictator was overthrown and killed by rebels on October 20, 2011. No American lives were lost.
11. Told Mubarak to Go: On February 1, 2011, publicly called on Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak to accept reform or step down, thus weakening the dictator’s position and putting America on the right side of the Arab Spring. Mubarak ended thirty-year rule when overthrown on February 11.
12. Reversed Bush Torture Policies: Two days after taking office, nullified Bush-era rulings that had allowed detainees in U.S. custody to undergo certain “enhanced” interrogation techniques considered inhumane under the Geneva Conventions. Also released the secret Bush legal rulings supporting the use of these techniques.
13. Improved America’s Image Abroad: With new policies, diplomacy, and rhetoric, reversed a sharp decline in world opinion toward the U.S. (and the corresponding loss of “soft power”) during the Bush years. From 2008 to 2011, favorable opinion toward the United States rose in ten of fifteen countries surveyed by the Pew Global Attitudes Project, with an average increase of 26 percent.
14. Kicked Banks Out of Federal Student Loan Program, Expanded Pell Grant Spending: As part of the 2010 health care reform bill, signed measure ending the wasteful decades-old practice of subsidizing banks to provide college loans. Starting July 2010 all students began getting their federal student loans directly from the federal government. Treasury will save $67 billion over ten years, $36 billion of which will go to expanding Pell Grants to lower-income students.

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Computer Engineering Fields And Categories?


Hey YA! community,
I’m a computer engineering junior and I’ve been thinking a lot about the future and jobs and the like. I’m having trouble narrowing down specific fields and niches in the tech sector. I know it can be divided broadly into Hardware and Software. So can anyone give me like a breakdown of most of the fields? Stuff like computer security or whatever.
Thanks!!!!

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Please Explain This Sentence…..?


The banks that have followed this strategy of selling services to the low-frequency long tail of the sector have found out that it can be an important niche, long ignored by consumer banks.

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