“Invitation to Love”, the soap opera within the show “Twin Peaks”.
“Invitation to Love”, the soap opera within the show “Twin Peaks”.
Came here for this!
Reminds me of an oldie:
“Roses are red, Violets are blue. Some poems rhyme, This one don’t.”
Susan Crawford wrote on and talked about this (mis)handling of telecoms in the US context years ago, the government letting the companies divide regions up and ensure a lack of competition.
My reading of the situation in Canada for internet and wireless is that it was a historical mix of:
Yes, right beside the “Turbo” button that you’d never turn off (I mean, why would you).
Some of those were cylinder keyboard locks, like the old bike locks that were vulnerable to the Bic pen trick.
I actually think the boycotts and sustained bad press about Loblaws might be helping more than this grocery code of conduct, whatever it’s supposedly doing.
But good news, everyone!
Amendments were made in December to the Competition Act that should help, eventually.
Here are some details you never asked for but I’ll post anyway.
I read a good blog post about it on Lemmy somewhere, but I can’t find it now unfortunately.
The gist is, from memory:
But some of the changes in December basically alter those considerations about harms and these companies are legally exposed to civil suits if the harms are realized. This could help.
In some ways, I suppose we should be grateful for Loblaws’ exceptional greed of late because maybe nothing would change if we weren’t angry and focused enough on these problems.
I see this as a very long long overdue reaction to the telecom and grocery chain debacles. It’s hard to know for certain because these commercial dynasties are very tight with the political dynasties. It seems like they don’t really want anything to change. Just posturing for the cameras and then let things go back to “normal”.
Take the Internet, since its inception in Canada. One of the highest prices in the world. Same with wireless. Lately, the CRTC has helped kill almost all independent ISPs through long drawn out reviews and delay tactics on wholesale fiber rates, even after the lobbyist as Head was replaced with someone less duplicitous; someone who started with the mandate to focus policy on consumer benefits and protections as opposed to the industry. Still going on.
And of course, allowing Rogers to buy Shaw and Freedom Mobile. Selling off to videotron doesn’t help as much as a viable fourth player would have.
And now it feels like they’re sabre rattling about grocery regulations, encouraging Loblaws to drop prices until we forget about it but leave the door open for these problems to happen again. Then run around again trying to woo a foreign company/investment to come to Canada just like Wind Mobile, fail due to favouritism of Canadian incumbent companies and get bought and sold in 10-20 years. I don’t blame these foreign companies for avoiding Canada. Too risky.
The government is very conflicted right now it seems. But I’m hoping the changes to the act will turn this around for future industry decisions.
A colleague of mine just pointed this app out. I love that this exists.
But make sure to dig into the additional info and draw your own conclusions.
For instance, it ranked Pure Life water (a typical bottle of water) at 65/100 because it contained sodium bicarbonate. This is something in the category of emulsifiers, a category that one study related to breast cancer, a preliminary study noted to have discrepancies. That’s a few leaps of correlation via a single one-time study with documented issues.
Anyway, I’d say the app is still worthwhile then having no easy guidance on product health and safety.
Here’s the iOS link: https://apps.apple.com/ca/app/yuka-food-cosmetic-scanner/id1092799236
An AI-powered Clippy… have we learned nothing from Star Trek Lower Decks about what can go wrong with this??
Arthur Grand Wizard Technologies
This isn’t the first time he’s been attacked.
To try and thwart malicious scripted login attempts, some sites expect a manual keyboard action on the username and/or password fields.
You can use your password manager to populate the fields but then click each and add then remove a character. That usually handles it.
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I don’t see a way to do this in the settings.
Tenacious D did the cover I’m most familiar with.
“Dudes and dudettes” seems more on the level.