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Board Posts

1
Anonymous
@soapbox
07 Apr 2013 12:40PM
• 1,311 views • 0 attachments
[ − ] thread [ 8 replies ]

Dear ML Staff,

Hopefully, some lessons were drawn on your part in being more judicious with your advertisers. You always picked advertisers on the sketchy, super-intrusive end (and even that is probably not worth the little bit of extra ca$h compared to the traffic losses when it frightens many visitors), but when it comes to genuinely criminal malware installing advertisers, that reflects extremely poorly on the site, and it supposed status as not-a-free-for-all, where anything goes.

Beyond this malware episode, you can still purchase advertisers that depict sexually explicit, graphic content, without these being really intrusive (like ones that open little loud videos - it's obvious no one wants to see or hear those when they are trying to view an actual video for the site (even anon viewing of your website deserves minimal respect, I argue)). And, of course, as for safety, that's a whole misdemeanor-versus-felony level of serious.

And again, all for naught. For nothing. There's no way you need the little bit of extra money from the super-intrusive, forcing-one-to-manually-close-them, making-the-site-experience-unpleasant advertisers. There's just no way that pay that much more than the ones that are un-intrusive (again, in their format, not content).

So, whatever short-term profit goals are motivating you, ML Staff, to lean towards purchasing the intrusive advertisers (who, due to that character, also pose a greater risk in going beyond purposeful nuisance, to actual unsafe malware behaviour, as we have seen in the last few days when ML was effectively down for 75 percent of visitors), I am almost certain you are actually losing money from these.

You, ML Staff, will actually get __more money__ if you opt to go with the non-intrusive advertisers. Because, even though they pay you slightly less, the rise in traffic will more than offset the difference (difference in whatever little extra premium the intrusive advertisers are paying you right now so that they able to harass your visitors).

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1
Anonymous
@soapbox
07 Nov 2011 2:10PM
• 834 views • 0 attachments
[ − ] thread [ 8 replies ]

I strongly feel that attorneys and the judicial system will be the end of us (speaking of the USA). For all the good they do, they do more harm than good. This country has become litigation central. We pass laws where no law is necessary, we pass judgement where no judgement is required.

I guess all in the attempt to make a perfect society out of one that was never intended to be so (and we were happy with that). But now its all about litigating every fucking thing imaginable and it makes me sick.

Attorneys and judicial idiots, if you want to litigate something stick with border laws, security, and corp. But leave my family and the people that love this country and rightly belong here the fuck alone and let us live our lives and handle our own problems just like we used to do.

If it works don't fix it, we have become a nation of everything must be a legal process and if we don't have a law for that lets make one.

Its bullshit, i know the legal system is good money and the more laws made the more clients you have to represent, im asking you give us our country back and stop making redicilous laws that should not be.

Thanks

Peace Always

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1
Anonymous
@chicks
01 Jun 2011 9:44AM
• 91 views • 0 attachments
[ − ] thread [ 2 replies ]

ISLAMABAD, Jun 1 (APP): The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) has urged the newspaper industry to accept the judicial ruling in good faith and implement the long-delayed wage award. �It endorses the PFUJ demand that the Eighth Wage Board be constituted without further delay�, said IFJ Asia-Pacific Director Jacqueline Park in a statement.
�The IFJ welcomes this ruling by the High Court in Karachi, though we take no joy from the 11-year record of obstruction by the newspaper industry against the statutory protection extended to newspaper industry workers,� he added.
�The IFJ also extends its congratulations to its affiliate, the Pakistan Federal Union of Journalists (PFUJ), on a significant legal victory which will hopefully lead the way to improved wages and working conditions for all Pakistan�s journalists and news industry workers,� he said.
On May 31, the Sindh High Court in Karachi dismissed identical petitions filed by the All Pakistan Newspaper Society (APNS) the apex body representing the industry and the Herald Media group, which sought to quash the Seventh Wage Award for journalists and newspaper workers, announced in 2000.
It is pertinent to mention here that, Pakistan�s newspaper industry workers enjoy legal protection for their wages and working conditions under the Newspaper Employees (Conditions of Service) Act, passed in 1973. 66666666ISLAMABAD, Jun 1 (APP): The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) has urged the newspaper industry to accept the judicial ruling in good faith and implement the long-delayed wage award. �It endorses the PFUJ demand that the Eighth Wage Board be constituted without further delay�, said IFJ Asia-Pacific Director Jacqueline Park in a statement.
�The IFJ welcomes this ruling by the High Court in Karachi, though we take no joy from the 11-year record of obstruction by the newspaper industry against the statutory protection extended to newspaper industry workers,� he added.
�The IFJ also extends its congratulations to its affiliate, the Pakistan Federal Union of Journalists (PFUJ), on a significant legal victory which will hopefully lead the way to improved wages and working conditions for all Pakistan�s journalists and news industry workers,� he said.
On May 31, the Sindh High Court in Karachi dismissed identical petitions filed by the All Pakistan Newspaper Society (APNS) the apex body representing the industry and the Herald Media group, which sought to quash the Seventh Wage Award for journalists and newspaper workers, announced in 2000.
It is pertinent to mention here that, Pakistan�s newspaper industry workers enjoy legal protection for their wages and working conditions under the Newspaper Employees (Conditions of Service) Act, passed in 1973. 66666666ISLAMABAD, Jun 1 (APP): The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) has urged the newspaper industry to accept the judicial ruling in good faith and implement the long-delayed wage award. �It endorses the PFUJ demand that the Eighth Wage Board be constituted without further delay�, said IFJ Asia-Pacific Director Jacqueline Park in a statement.
�The IFJ welcomes this ruling by the High Court in Karachi, though we take no joy from the 11-year record of obstruction by the newspaper industry against the statutory protection extended to newspaper industry workers,� he added.
�The IFJ also extends its congratulations to its affiliate, the Pakistan Federal Union of Journalists (PFUJ), on a significant legal victory which will hopefully lead the way to improved wages and working conditions for all Pakistan�s journalists and news industry workers,� he said.
On May 31, the Sindh High Court in Karachi dismissed identical petitions filed by the All Pakistan Newspaper Society (APNS) the apex body representing the industry and the Herald Media group, which sought to quash the Seventh Wage Award for journalists and newspaper workers, announced in 2000.
It is pertinent to mention here that, Pakistan�s newspaper industry workers enjoy legal protection for their wages and working conditions under the Newspaper Employees (Conditions of Service) Act, passed in 1973. 666666s (Conditions of Service) Act, passed in 1973. 666666s (Conditions of Service) Act, passed in 1973. 666666s (Conditions of Service) Act, passed in 1973. 666666s (Conditions of Service) Act, passed in 1973. 666666

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-3
Anonymous
@motherless
26 Aug 2012 3:32PM
• 2,845 views • 1 attachment
[ − ] thread [ 18 replies ]

Hello, my name is Jimmy Ray Joe Bob Buford, district attorney in and for Wackasackahatchee County, Alabama. It has come to the attention of my office that Motherless.com hosts photographic and video depictions of "devices designed or marketed as useful primarily for the stimulation of human genital organs," a violation of Alabama law under Section 13A-12-200.2 of the Alabama Criminal Code.

We therefore order Motherless.com to immediately cease and desist from further hosting, transmitting, and disseminating of all such materials, or this office will have no choice but to seek judicial redress in the Superior Court of the State of Alabama.

Thank you, and good day.

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