you will never know if the lack of pressurization issues was because their plan was fine or caused by changes thanks to his campaign. hindsight is 20/20.
the fact that they took that route is the problem.
wrote our own kerberos-aaS clone with less features and vulnerable to more internal attacks than plain kerberos and more reliant in a central cert (not cert authority, cert), that is only used sporadically for cross services, not users (there's something else from major vendor there)
and that team now keeps growing and the feature never improves :)
The day Google stops paying mozilla and mozilla close shop, they will get the same treatment Google itself set up in courts against Microsoft for IE6. It's pretty much protection money for their past selfs.
> Today, Muzinich retains financial ties to the firm through an opaque transaction in which he transferred his shares in the privately held company to his father.
It's a top gov official using the exact same scheme as Tiger King.
And that is even before any of the 3trillion part even begins.
You know what cookies are and made your informed decision to accept them in your browsers. I do not, for example, and block most of them.
99% of internet users do not had that knowledge before those "stupid click-through warnings everywhere".
So if you want to write off the outcome of the EU cookie law, it is not "entitled Californian software engineers got a little annoyed", but instead "the whole world woke up to the fact advertising companies are tracking everything they do online via cookies".
> Philadelphia Police Department Lt. Frank Powell proceeded to drop two one-pound bombs (which the police referred to as "entry devices"[31]) made of FBI-supplied Tovex
the fact that they took that route is the problem.