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Symmetry wrote:I'm kind of tired of people saying that other people are calling him a saint while by far and away the majority of people are saying that the majority of people are calling him a saint, referring to nobody, and referring instead to the people who found him an impressive man, and a skilled businessman. But anyway...
Long sentence.






















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Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
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Army of GOD wrote:Symmetry wrote:I'm kind of tired of people saying that other people are calling him a saint while by far and away the majority of people are saying that the majority of people are calling him a saint, referring to nobody, and referring instead to the people who found him an impressive man, and a skilled businessman. But anyway...
Long sentence.
meh, I know a lot of people who praised the absolute shit out of him. Especially on Facebook.
f*ck Facebook.



Symmetry wrote:Army of GOD wrote:Symmetry wrote:I'm kind of tired of people saying that other people are calling him a saint while by far and away the majority of people are saying that the majority of people are calling him a saint, referring to nobody, and referring instead to the people who found him an impressive man, and a skilled businessman. But anyway...
Long sentence.
meh, I know a lot of people who praised the absolute shit out of him. Especially on Facebook.
f*ck Facebook.
Yeah, but they don't think he was superhuman. A lot of this "For all you people who think Steve Jobs was a saint" nonsense, is directed at nobody, people liked him, and still like him, but nobody thought he was a saint, or even anything close.




















nietzsche wrote:Symmetry wrote:Army of GOD wrote:Symmetry wrote:I'm kind of tired of people saying that other people are calling him a saint while by far and away the majority of people are saying that the majority of people are calling him a saint, referring to nobody, and referring instead to the people who found him an impressive man, and a skilled businessman. But anyway...
Long sentence.
meh, I know a lot of people who praised the absolute shit out of him. Especially on Facebook.
f*ck Facebook.
Yeah, but they don't think he was superhuman. A lot of this "For all you people who think Steve Jobs was a saint" nonsense, is directed at nobody, people liked him, and still like him, but nobody thought he was a saint, or even anything close.
I don't react well to critiscism, so be careful...



Symmetry wrote:nietzsche wrote:Symmetry wrote:Army of GOD wrote:Symmetry wrote:I'm kind of tired of people saying that other people are calling him a saint while by far and away the majority of people are saying that the majority of people are calling him a saint, referring to nobody, and referring instead to the people who found him an impressive man, and a skilled businessman. But anyway...
Long sentence.
meh, I know a lot of people who praised the absolute shit out of him. Especially on Facebook.
f*ck Facebook.
Yeah, but they don't think he was superhuman. A lot of this "For all you people who think Steve Jobs was a saint" nonsense, is directed at nobody, people liked him, and still like him, but nobody thought he was a saint, or even anything close.
I don't react well to critiscism, so be careful...
Meh, have fun with the corpse.




















Former Apple Inc. Chief Executive Steve Jobs and top executives at five major book publishers illegally conspired to raise the prices of e-books, costing consumers tens of millions of dollars, federal and state officials alleged in antitrust suits filed Wednesday.
The collusion began in 2009 and price fixing took effect with the launch of the iPad in early 2010, boosting the average cost of e-books by $2 to $3 each "virtually overnight," said Sharis Pozen, the acting head of the Justice Department's antitrust division.
which gave the iPad maker a guaranteed 30% commission on each e-book it sold through its online marketplace

















BigBallinStalin wrote:Former Apple Inc. Chief Executive Steve Jobs and top executives at five major book publishers illegally conspired to raise the prices of e-books, costing consumers tens of millions of dollars, federal and state officials alleged in antitrust suits filed Wednesday.
The collusion began in 2009 and price fixing took effect with the launch of the iPad in early 2010, boosting the average cost of e-books by $2 to $3 each "virtually overnight," said Sharis Pozen, the acting head of the Justice Department's antitrust division.
I'm eager to see how they're going to build this case. They'll need more than that. Five major book publishers and Steve Jobs raised prices on the e-books, which they own and offer. If you don't like the higher price, then shucks, I guess you're not getting an ebook--from that particular publisher. If you don't like property rights, then I guess you should be outraged that people can decide how much to charge for their own items in particular places.




















nietzsche wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Former Apple Inc. Chief Executive Steve Jobs and top executives at five major book publishers illegally conspired to raise the prices of e-books, costing consumers tens of millions of dollars, federal and state officials alleged in antitrust suits filed Wednesday.
The collusion began in 2009 and price fixing took effect with the launch of the iPad in early 2010, boosting the average cost of e-books by $2 to $3 each "virtually overnight," said Sharis Pozen, the acting head of the Justice Department's antitrust division.
I'm eager to see how they're going to build this case. They'll need more than that. Five major book publishers and Steve Jobs raised prices on the e-books, which they own and offer. If you don't like the higher price, then shucks, I guess you're not getting an ebook--from that particular publisher. If you don't like property rights, then I guess you should be outraged that people can decide how much to charge for their own items in particular places.
i think they have enough, also two publishers have settled already.

















BigBallinStalin wrote:nietzsche wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Former Apple Inc. Chief Executive Steve Jobs and top executives at five major book publishers illegally conspired to raise the prices of e-books, costing consumers tens of millions of dollars, federal and state officials alleged in antitrust suits filed Wednesday.
The collusion began in 2009 and price fixing took effect with the launch of the iPad in early 2010, boosting the average cost of e-books by $2 to $3 each "virtually overnight," said Sharis Pozen, the acting head of the Justice Department's antitrust division.
I'm eager to see how they're going to build this case. They'll need more than that. Five major book publishers and Steve Jobs raised prices on the e-books, which they own and offer. If you don't like the higher price, then shucks, I guess you're not getting an ebook--from that particular publisher. If you don't like property rights, then I guess you should be outraged that people can decide how much to charge for their own items in particular places.
i think they have enough, also two publishers have settled already.
More importantly, that doesn't mean the law is still just. It means that the publishers value not prolonging these ridiculous cases.




















nietzsche wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:nietzsche wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Former Apple Inc. Chief Executive Steve Jobs and top executives at five major book publishers illegally conspired to raise the prices of e-books, costing consumers tens of millions of dollars, federal and state officials alleged in antitrust suits filed Wednesday.
The collusion began in 2009 and price fixing took effect with the launch of the iPad in early 2010, boosting the average cost of e-books by $2 to $3 each "virtually overnight," said Sharis Pozen, the acting head of the Justice Department's antitrust division.
I'm eager to see how they're going to build this case. They'll need more than that. Five major book publishers and Steve Jobs raised prices on the e-books, which they own and offer. If you don't like the higher price, then shucks, I guess you're not getting an ebook--from that particular publisher. If you don't like property rights, then I guess you should be outraged that people can decide how much to charge for their own items in particular places.
i think they have enough, also two publishers have settled already.
More importantly, that doesn't mean the law is still just. It means that the publishers value not prolonging these ridiculous cases.
Dude, you are into this shit, you should know that big companies have a nice set of tricks that can use against the consumers, and that consumerism is supposed to mean that the government must protect the consumers at all cost. That's why dumping and all that shit is forbidden. I mean, what's wrong with selling your stuff in less of what it costs you to make it?? Nothing, only that you kill the competence and then you can put whatever price you want and the consumer will have no other choice but to pay your price.

















which gave the iPad maker a guaranteed 30% commission on each e-book it sold through its online marketplace



















































The collusion began in 2009 and price fixing took effect with the launch of the iPad in early 2010, boosting the average cost of e-books by $2 to $3 each "virtually overnight," said Sharis Pozen, the acting head of the Justice Department's antitrust division.




























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(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"




























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