There have been multiple accounts created with the sole purpose of posting advertisement posts or replies containing unsolicited advertising.

Accounts which solely post advertisements, or persistently post them may be terminated.

news

This magazine is from a federated server and may be incomplete. Browse more on the original instance.

xmunk , (edited ) in A worker won $600,000 after Twitter said his goodbye messages showed he had resigned. The case holds valuable lessons for staff and employers.

Fucking good. I’ve had to fire people (up in Canada though) and it’d be fucking ridiculous to “Please opt in to not be fired” it violates so many fucking employment laws.

Volkditty ,

That’s why we don’t bother having employment laws. So much easier this way!

some_guy , in Video shows officers dragged [NFL Star] Tyreek Hill out of his car after he put his window back up

Video shows that two motorcycle officers went after Hill after he appeared to speed past them at in his McLaren sports car on the roadway entering Hard Rock Stadium in light traffic — they later said they clocked him at 60 mph (97 kph). They turned on their lights and pulled Hill over. One knocked on the driver’s window and told him to put it down, which Hill did and handed him his driver’s license.

https://lemmy.sdf.org/pictrs/image/fa058209-3e59-4927-b4dc-922d7cf81a83.png

WhyDoYouPersist , in A worker won $600,000 after Twitter said his goodbye messages showed he had resigned. The case holds valuable lessons for staff and employers.

Paywall?

AnActOfCreation OP ,
@AnActOfCreation@programming.dev avatar
officermike ,

deleted_by_moderator

  • Loading...
  • ILikeBoobies , in Republicans threaten a government shutdown unless Congress makes it harder to vote

    who cares if SovCits can’t vote?

    homesweethomeMrL , in No more free pass: Regulation starts to crack down on social media platforms

    Yawn

    bloodfart , in Most US voters say plastics industry should be held responsible for recycling claims – report

    Significantly reducing our reliance on plastics cannot be taken on as a single issue or at the local or even national level.

    Plastics are a byproduct of the fossil fuel industry.

    That’s the only reason materials which were marketed to people as miraculous in the 40s, 50s and 60s are so cheap.

    The extraction industry is global, and the production of plastics is as well.

    Even if one nation reduced its fossil fuel and plastic consumption significantly, there will be other nations that will take the opportunity to get that cheap energy, materials and industry.

    rc__buggy , in Republicans threaten a government shutdown unless Congress makes it harder to vote

    RealID for all. Free at point of service. Do it at the post office right next to the Postal Banking window.

    Done and done.

    LordOfTheChia ,

    Yup, it’s interesting how so many of these universal ID for voting laws don’t also include an easy, convenient, and free means for all citizens to get IDs.

    Daxtron2 ,

    Because the point is to disenfranchise voters not to stop illegal immigrants.

    MadBigote ,

    I have always thought that the American voting system is… Odd? I read you need to register every now and then in order to be able to vote? In Mexico we all get an ID issued by the federal government as you turn 18, and it is valid for pretty much anything, including voting. It is valid for years, you can vote as long as you have it on your possession. Updating your address or getting a reposition is free, and we even now allow Mexicans living abroad ( undocumented or not) to vote.

    Granted, the system is not perfect, but I believe an important part of a democracy is to make participating in it as convenient as possible.

    dhork ,

    First of all, elections are overseen by each state individually. While there is Federal law involving elections, it’s up to the States to implement them. Due to the Electoral College, the Presidential Election is really a weighted combination of the results of 50 separate State elections (and DC). So ypu can argue that we really don’t have any national elections at all, so each state runs their own.

    Then, there is another complicating factor that there is no one piece of Federal ID that everyone is mandated to have. The closest thing is the Social Security Card, but that isn’t really supposed to be used as ID. Not everyone has a passport, and there is no national ID card. The closest thing we have to a universal ID is the driver’s license, but again that is managed on a state-by-state basis.

    The main argument here is that when someone registers to vote, they must submit proof of residence, but Federal law holds that they do not have to show proof of citizenship. They merely have to attest that they are a citizen, and lying on that form is a crime. Many states object to that. Some go as far as to say that if you do not bring your proof of citizenship whe you register to vote, they will only let you vote in Federal elections, not state ones.

    The fundamental question is: if you know you are a citizen but have lost both your passport and your birth certificate, should you be disenfranchised? Republicans clearly say “yes”.

    PriorityMotif , in Ohio police have 'no credible reports' of Haitian immigrants harming pets, contradicting JD Vance's claim
    @PriorityMotif@lemmy.world avatar

    They are really leaning on these fake South American controversies. There’s another one about a Venezuelan gang taking over an apartment building in Colorado.

    UnderpantsWeevil ,
    @UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world avatar

    I heard that’s not a problem anymore, because of the brave men and women of the checks notes Hell’s Angels.

    some_guy , in 'I'm living a lie': On the streets of a Aurora, Colorado, pregnant migrants struggle to survive

    They didn’t know many people who had moved to the United States, but pictures and videos of Venezuelans on Facebook and TikTok showed young, smiling families in nice clothes standing in front of new cars boasting of beautiful new lives.

    I’m not one to believe that foreign disinformation campaigns contribute as much as the media would like me to. I think that a lot of USA citizens truly are as terrible as they are and want fascism without being tricked by Russia. But this sure sounds like a disinfo campaign by a foreign power.

    Just weeks after arriving in Denver, Herrera began to wonder if the success she had seen was real. She and her friends had developed another theory: The hype around the U.S. was part of some red de engaño, or network of deception.

    Seems I’m not the only one.

    In fact, former President Donald Trump last week called attention to the city, suggesting a Venezuelan gang had taken over an apartment complex. Authorities say that hasn’t happened.

    Of course.

    gAlienLifeform OP ,
    @gAlienLifeform@lemmy.world avatar

    That sounds more like how people have always used social media (e.g. bragging about any accomplishments they can, hiding any difficulties they’re going through, etc.) and how US based marketers have always used American Dream bullshit to pressure people into spending themselves into debt than any kind of coordinated foreign disinfo campaign to me

    Beyond that, the fact that “people can come to the US and find prosperity and stability” is a lie seems to be the bigger underlying problem here

    FlashZordon , in Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs loses $100m default judgment over sexual assault allegations
    @FlashZordon@lemmy.world avatar
    homesweethomeMrL , in SpaceX launches private mission that's expected to feature first all-civilian spacewalk

    Why stop at civilians? Why not the first all-children space flight? The first all-Romanian Grandmother spacewalk? The first all-Galapagos Island Fauna spacewalk?

    LarmyOfLone , (edited ) in Congress takes up a series of bills targeting China, from drones to drugs.

    Hmm this reads like propaganda. Hey wait a minute, VOA?!

    Of course this is basically “socialism” - Nations protecting their economy from cheap goods so that they can build up and maintain their own vehicle and drone manufacturing. And seeing how efficient the drones proved in Ukraine this is smart.

    This is how imperialism always worked. This is just protectionism couched in “china bad”.

    Fedizen , in Ohio police have 'no credible reports' of Haitian immigrants harming pets, contradicting JD Vance's claim

    RFK Jr slowly pushing a half eaten pet under a rug.

    Forester , (edited ) in America’s 3D Printed Gun Problem Is Getting Worse and Spreading to the World
    @Forester@yiffit.net avatar

    Clutches, pearls and swoons. The almost hysterical tone that this is written in is not having the effect the author intended.

    ceenote , in A worker won $600,000 after Twitter said his goodbye messages showed he had resigned. The case holds valuable lessons for staff and employers.

    internal communication on platforms like Slack is not always private

    That’s common sense, frankly.

    Paddzr ,

    But people don’t understand it.

    Hell, no email sent or received is yours and likely can never be truly deleted off your company’s exchsnge. Same with files etc.

    It’s not common knowledge, let’s not pretend it is and educate people.

    bluGill ,

    Most companies have a strict policy to delete everything off of exchange after a few months unless there is a reason to keep it longer. You can't bring up in court anything that wan daleted before you looked.

    sylver_dragon ,

    When I worked as a US FedGov contractor, I was greeted with a long warning banner every time I logged into my computer. The tl;dr version of it is “fuck your privacy”. Being that I was part of cybersecurity for the site I was working at, I was one of the people doing the fucking. While we didn’t read everything from everyone all the time, we were logging it and could pull it up, if we were performing an investigation. We also had some automated stuff scanning for patterns and keywords on a regular basis, which could trigger an investigation.

    While I’m no longer in the FedGov space (thank the gods), I still assume that everything I do on my work system or with work accounts is being logged. Also, I’m still working in cybersecurity and am often still the one doing the privacy fucking. Yes, everything is being logged. We may not look at it today, we may not look at it tomorrow. But, when HR and Legal ask us about a user’s activity, we can usually be pretty detailed. Act accordingly.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • [email protected]
  • random
  • lifeLocal
  • goranko
  • All magazines