Saturday, March 23rd, 2019 (
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While complaining about the ills of society and bringing attention to stupidity and abuse are vital (and fun) activities, it is equally as important for us to band together and promote the positives by saluting those who are actually doing it right.
Today, the company that deserves our praise is Nordstrom's. Check out this sign found outside one of their stores:
Christmas creep is a problem of greed and of commercialization of holidays. It's an assault on our peace of mind and of the very few American traditions that we have. Or put simply, Christmas creep ruins Christmas. No music, no decorations, no nothing until AFTER Thanksgiving. It has always been and will always be that way in my house and I respect and support any company with the guts to keep to the same policy.
Nordstrom's, for today at least, you are my friend.
Tags:
Big Business,
Christmas,
Good Stuff,
Holidays,
Nordstroms,
Retailers
Saturday, March 23rd, 2019 (
2 comments)
For as long as Google has existed, it has been and continues to be my favorite search engine by far. I like the company, their services, and just about everything about them except for one thing: abysmal privacy policies.
Though Google has legitimate use for storing search records to see how long it takes someone to find what they're looking for, there's no need to store an IP address along with the search records. Any unique identifier would work. There's certainly no reason why Google should store your records for 18 months, let alone 18 minutes.
To be fair, sometimes they get things right like when they strongly resisted government invasion of search records, but the information is there and that creates a risk.
While that issue is still in the air, Google recently made another step in the right direction with their Google Dashboard feature. When logged into any Google service, you can go to http://www.google.com/dashboard to see a consolidated listing of everything Google knows about you. Documents, chat records, search history, etc.
The service gives you single-page access to the privacy controls for every service that you're using with Google. This not only makes what they have on you more transparent, but easier to manage. Granted, they have more work to do in giving you control over what's stored and what isn't, you can at least delete some of the data. For instance, if you've made searches in the past that list your home address or medical information and you don't want Google to have that on file, you can delete it.
Of course, that doesn't get rid of every copy that exists, but it at leasts takes it out of their current records and makes it less likely to get swooped up by government snooping or any future data breaches that Google might suffer. All in all, a very good step in the right direction so make sure to check it out if you use Google services.
Tags:
Big Business,
Good Stuff,
Google,
Internet,
Search Records
Saturday, March 23rd, 2019 (
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U.S. Senator Charles E. Schumer is my hero of the day.

"If these companies want to say -- or sing for that matter -- that they are giving people free credit reports, then they can't charge people $15 a month, simple as that," Schumer said. "For years, these companies have said with a smile that they will provide a free credit report -- even though the government already requires a credit report be provided for free every year - and then suddenly, months later consumers get a bill in the mail for their credit monitoring services. My plan would finally bust up this scam and give consumers some honest choices."

Tags:
Annualcreditreport.com,
Charles Schumer,
Congress,
Credit Monitoring,
Freecreditreport.com,
Identity Theft,
Senator
Saturday, March 23rd, 2019 (
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The CDC says swine flu is everywhere. A CBS investigation says it's not. How do you know who's telling the truth? Well, try looking at the evidence.
According to Dr. Mercola of mercola.com:
- The CDC has stopped testing for Swine Flu so how would they know how wide-spread it is?
- The CDC has a long history of conflicts of interest between makers of vaccines and regulators of vaccines.
- "the U.S. government has granted vaccine makers total legal immunity from any lawsuits that result from the new swine flu vaccine"
And a little more detail on that last one:
The most problematic aspect of the PREP Act is that it removes all financial incentive to make a safe product.
In fact, vaccine makers now have a negative incentive to test it for safety, because if they are aware of problems, then they could potentially be held liable for willful misconduct!
As long as they can prove they "didn't know" of any problem, they will not be liable for damages. Hence it's in their best interest to know as little as possible about the adverse reactions it might cause.

Before you get hyped up about this "pandemic" and rush out to get the vaccine, maybe you should do a little more research. I'm not suggesting there's some conspiracy theory here, just that if what the article says is true, we already know that poor regulation leads to tragedies and abuse and the Swine Flu issue may be just one more example.
Tags:
CDC,
Courts,
Fraud Waste and Abuse,
Public Health,
Regulation,
The President,
Vaccines