Dennis, This SI snafu, which is a big one, and seemed to happen at the same time as the 'planned shutdown' has made me give up! I have to go through posts one at a time instead of ten at a time.
They had this same problem a week or two ago when they had a similar planned shutdown.
Mqurice [my real name - in Belgium on AZERTY computers]
PS: Bear in mind that WSJ.com is only a screen name and Carrie Lee, who claims that is her real name but it might be just a screen name, and claims to be a reporter for WSJ.com is trying to hurt investors. She has perhaps illegally manipulated the media to detract from Globalstar share price and promote her perhaps real book about stock market manipulation - which presumably is instructing people, perhaps illegally, on how to manipulate markets.
You should NOT trust WSJ.com or associated persons who make up things about pixelated people.
Oddly, for a company which self-styles itself as an internet company, WSJ.com has a perverse attitude to the Web. They don't usually, in their paper editions, when identifying people, write "Dennis, who uses Dennis as his name and claims to be a person" when writing about somebody they interviewed in 3D reality who informs them their name is Dennis.
In the internet, there are not yet bots which can write articulate sentences, so they can conclude that anything who writes to them or talks to them is a person, not a cyborg. Just as in real, 3D life, when somebody tells them their name in real, pixelated form, it is their name as reliably as when talking to them by phone or face to face. People lie, so unless they sight a birth certificate or cite a third party who can identify the person, they don't know that the person they are quoting is using a real name.
I shall in future use my real name in pixelated form and lie to reporters when talking to them by phone or in 3D.
Thanks for the headsup, Dennis, if that's your real name and if you are, as you claim, actually a person and are actually still alive. Like Shroedinger's Cat, I don't know you are still alive - it is possible that WSJ.com has sent an assassination squad around to your real address and put cyanide in your water or air. You have to watch out for character assassination if dealing with reporters, who are notable for misquoting, distorting, lying and otherwise creating their own pixilated sense of reality. Which is different from pixelated. And cite is different from sight [or site for that matter] - not that you have made that mistake - I'm just raving now... |