Paying people who create the media you live for so that they can live? Imagine
The admissions occurred during a hearing with special master Daniel Garrie, a court-appointed subject-matter expert tasked with resolving a disclosure impasse. Garrie was attempting to get the company to provide an exhaustive, definitive accounting of where personal data might be stored in some 55 Facebook subsystems. Both veteran Facebook engineers, with according to LinkedIn two decades of experience between them, struggled to even venture what may be stored in Facebook’s subsystems. “I’m just trying to understand at the most basic level from this list what we’re looking at,” Garrie asked.
“I don’t believe there’s a single person that exists who could answer that question,” replied Eugene Zarashaw, a Facebook engineering director. “It would take a significant team effort to even be able to answer that question.”
When asked about how Facebook might track down every bit of data associated with a given user account, Zarashaw was stumped again: “It would take multiple teams on the ad side to track down exactly the — where the data flows. I would be surprised if there’s even a single person that can answer that narrow question conclusively.”
wehavecomeforyourprivateschools:
Faced with the tamest expressions of public opposition, the British are working hard to prove they’re a nation of servile, forelock-tugging clowns.
I was arrested after asking “who elected him?” at the proclamation of King Charle
“Noooo, the monarchy doesn’t have any real power, stop blaming the queen for what the UK did!”
Incredibly wealthy, incredibly influential, and legally protected from the mildest criticism, I guess. It all just makes it even more damning that they won’t speak out on important topics that deserve to be condemned.
Abandoned houses in Mirlo Beach, a once thriving oceanfront town on North Carolina’s Outer Banks now slowly being reclaimed by the sea (some of these buildings have since been moved or have collapsed)
[photos: Greg Fitzgerald/ Island Free Press/ Don McCullough]
By Lev Koufax
Until recently, the Israeli government denied any culpability in journalist Shireen Abu Akleh’s death. However, on Sept. 5, the IDF released a statement admitting a “high possibility that Ms. Abu Akleh was accidentally hit by IDF gunfire fired towards suspects identified as armed Palestinian gunmen.”
Eyewitnesses reported that Israeli troops appeared to be firing directly at journalists. The IDF indicated that the stormtroopers responsible for Shireen’s death would face no criminal charges or prosecutions.





















