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[Phpgroupware-cvs] per


From: Penelope Hughes
Subject: [Phpgroupware-cvs] per
Date: Sat, 7 Oct 2006 12:09:06 +0200
User-agent: Thunderbird 1.5.0.7 (Windows/20060909)


Sounds great, doesn't it? But Olson never entered into a contract with Aquage.
One can only annotate it, and that's a big difference.
Although it would take some skill, who wants their neighbors being able to listen in? This lack of "Opt Out" mechanism runs counter to commonly accepted data privacy principles.
I think it's because it's unclear where the 'good vs.
The posted comments at TechCrunch are also a good read. If you cheat on your wife, you're in violation of your marriage's TOU.
I could see where some may want their business contact information available, say for new business development opportunities or recruitment. It's not too hard, but you will need to do a bit more than touch a gingham box to buy these. While effective for use with a small number of people willing to configure and learn it, it was just too burdensome for many others.
You have to understand what it is to be an independent author making his living off of this.
Although it would take some skill, who wants their neighbors being able to listen in? The main idea has merit: Lots of people contributing their individual knowledge to the whole to create something bigger and more useful than just the sum of its parts. Again, most of the comments posted at TechCrunch were resoundingly negative.
I can imagine them eavesdropping on attorneys, looking for information with which to blackmail people.
Others may view it much more darkly, and that's their prerogative. If you cheat on your wife, you're in violation of your marriage's TOU.
The main idea has merit: Lots of people contributing their individual knowledge to the whole to create something bigger and more useful than just the sum of its parts.
On the business side, I can see them engaging in industrial espionage and stealing trade secrets. We already have seen how clever criminals have become over the past several years at stealing account information and personal data. I could see where some may want their business contact information available, say for new business development opportunities or recruitment.
On the business side, I can see them engaging in industrial espionage and stealing trade secrets.
VOIP calls are vulnerable to a variety of threats that traditional telephone calls are not. The paper-objects were then photographed and composited in After Effects. I can imagine them eavesdropping on attorneys, looking for information with which to blackmail people. Sounds great, doesn't it?


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