There's already laws in place for posts that are sponsored to mention who sponsored it. I think that should extend to shills that are being astroturfed to pretend to be real people.
And as far as spammers go, they can add regulation to it, or users can have tools to filter based on age of accounts, number of people who already ignore that account, by company, region, whatever. Lots of possibilities.
Under its provisions, social media services will not be allowed to remove content or block accounts if the content on them does not break Polish law. In the event of removal or blockage, a complaint can be sent to the platform, which will have 24 hours to consider it. Within 48 hours of the decision, the user will be able to file a petition to the court for the return of access. The court will consider complaints within seven days of receipt and the entire process is to be electronic.
The diagram in this video says the german server is in AWS cloud. Its unlikely they raided AWS and took that server. It would be virtualized and be an image that runs on shared resources. And also not in a CIA facility.
So the raid happened and this video doesn't prove anything about it, the video is legit and there was no raid, or both are true and the video is unrelated to the raid.
You're getting really worked up. You shouldn't take this so personally. Windows is a joke. And you're in denial if you think it's as secure out the box as linux with selinux enabled. If you want security, try OpenBSD. Naturally the OS is only part of the equation, apps need security too, and it's the reason why everyone rags on PHP. Sloppy coders due to ease of use and barrier to entry. Same as point and click Windows admins.
At least openshift requires selinux enabled, prevents goofballs from disabling it to get around problems.
Samuel Little, 80, has confessed to strangling 93 people, virtually all of them women, in a murderous rampage that spanned 19 states and 30 years. A gifted artist with an accurate memory, Little has produced lifelike drawings of dozens of his victims. With the fervor of an old man recalling the exploits of his youth, he has provided police with precise details about their murders, reports the Washington Post. Across the nation, police have spent more than two years using that information to reopen cold-case investigations and bring closure to families who have waited decades to learn what happened to their relatives. “If Little hadn’t confessed … then none of this would have been solved,” said Angela Williamson, a Justice Department official. Investigators believe his confessions are “100 percent credible,” she said. So far, officials say they have identified more than 50 victims. Other cases are in limbo, either because police have been unable to find a killing with circumstances to match Little’s description, or because the victim is an unclaimed “Jane Doe.”
its a website. just create a login