Monday, June 25, 2007

SREA Acquires $75 Million Dollar Asset! - Stock scam

Score One Inc.(SREA)
$0.30

News hit just after close. SREA has acquired the $75 Million peace of land for the new "Recreation Town" in Dalian. This new project mimics a Facility in "Shui On" that profited more than $100 Million USD. SREA is going to go through the roof after this hits investors this weekend. Get on SREA at open on Monday!

The widespread criticism that ensued focused on the unintended consequences, namely the privacy rights of property owners in Victoria.

They can, however, be very important to the success of a service arrangement. A business person instructs them to send such letters.
Network neutrality is essentially about whether ISP's, or the owners of the pipes, can play with the traffic to prioritize some traffic at the expense of others. A business person instructs them to send such letters. Creating meaningful, measurable, and effective service levels for service provider agreements is not easy. I have not written about this for a while - but this is an issue that continues to bother me.

However, the fact sheet is relevant to all kinds of sensitive information, not just personal health information. I suspect lots of people will try to use them for business use, and perhaps web apps will be created for the iPhone browser that will bridge the gap. Thought needs to be put into the reason records are public and how they might be used differently online.

There is no reason to print or keep those numbers. Put those records online and all of those go away. The position of office of the information and privacy commissioner is public records pose a challenge to the privacy of citizens and, once in digital format, pose an even greater challenge.

And while I normally agree with Techdirt, I don't agree with their ongoing thought that such things happen when lawyers make business decisions.

The fact sheet lists five example encryption solutions to consider. I'm sure we will see commentary on this soon after it is on the market.

I agree that lawyers need to rethink reactions to things that are posted on the Web and advise accordingly, but lawyers don't fire off these letters on their own.

There have been instances where court records have been put online, and the number of queries skyrocketed.

It takes time, few know how to do it, and there is an embarrassment factor. That lead to letter from Dell legal counsel demanding that the post be removed. I have not written about this for a while - but this is an issue that continues to bother me.

The Info-Tech Advisor is only available by paid subscription, but a pdf of this article is at the link below, with their permission. A business person instructs them to send such letters. We didn't do that, and now we're paying for it.

But access to online records must be looked at differently than access to paper records. So query what is really accomplished by the blogging ban. That's not an issue if it improves the quality of the data, so long as it is not at the expense of another. The other thing that concerns me is what part of those numbers and other info the retailer keeps on their systems.

I suspect lots of people will try to use them for business use, and perhaps web apps will be created for the iPhone browser that will bridge the gap. And some print too much of it, or print the first several digits, or print them on the retailer copy but not the customer copy.
Keep in mind that while there is no question that it is a cool and innovative device, it is aimed at the consumer market. They can, however, be very important to the success of a service arrangement. Dell puts it well in their reply when they say: instead of trying to control information that was made public, we should have simply corrected anything that was inaccurate. The protection afforded by practical obscurity is lost when records are put online.
A recent fact sheet from the Ontario privacy commissioner contains useful advice for any business that needs to encrypt data.

There is no reason to print or keep those numbers. This article has some good insight into how to create an effective SLA.

Privacy commissioners and courts have dealt with this issue on assessment rolls in at least three provinces.

The fact sheet lists five example encryption solutions to consider.

Network neutrality is essentially about whether ISP's, or the owners of the pipes, can play with the traffic to prioritize some traffic at the expense of others.
The widespread criticism that ensued focused on the unintended consequences, namely the privacy rights of property owners in Victoria.

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