Under FCRA, your employer or potential employer must get permission from you before performing any credit report (which includes a salary report).
>You must give your consent for reports to be provided to employers. A consumer reporting agency may not give out information about you to your employer, or a potential employer, without your written consent given to the employer. Written consent generally is not required in the trucking industry. For more information, go to www.ftc.gov/credit.
>Within the new European GDPR framework, IP addresses are to be considered as personally identifiable information,...
My understanding is that many of these details are yet to be settled with GDPR. The case referenced above was not interpreted under GDPR, which has yet to take effect. The definitions of personally identifiable data data rather vague, and precedent has not been set. A quick search showed conflicting opinions, but one perspective to consider is quoted below:
> In addition, businesses should note that Recital 26 to the recently adopted EU General Data Protection Regulation ("GDPR") states that the test for whether a person is "identifiable" (considered in detail above) depends upon "all the means reasonably likely to be used" to identify that person. The CJEU in Breyer did not directly consider the issue of likelihood of identification. If the BRD was not reasonably likely attempt to identify Mr Breyer from his IP address, this could potentially give rise to a different analysis under the GDPR. Consequently, it may be necessary for the CJEU to revisit this issue after enforcement of the GDPR begins on 25 May 2018.
This is a few years old, so if you know of some new decision or regulation that clarifies it would be great to know!
While unlikely a factor in this case, I wouldn't be so quick to trust National Geographic as it is a for-profit company owned by 21st Century Fox (of Fox News fame). Its credibility shouldn't be categorized on equal footing as Nature.
I love the idea of zero-knowledge password proofs. Others can chime in on the approach you've proposed, but I have a more practical concern about developing critical mass.
How do you break through the chicken and egg problem of not enough users using or not enough browsers supporting this capability?
This is a good list of inputs, though I think immutable public timestamps is the only one that was impossible pre-blockchain, and it's not clear what the value of this is.
I'd argue that the rest of them were not impossible before blockchain. From my perspective blockchain just makes these easier/cheaper.
>I've also never had a full-time job as I jumped straight from my BS to a PhD.
Not having any work experience means you'll go through "University Recruiting" (vs experienced hire) recruiting channels at any large company. This gives you tremendous freedom to explore a variety of careers as employers will only be able to judge you by your academic credentials and you won't be pigeon-holed by your professional experience. Use this to your advantage and explore as many careers & companies as possible.
Your internship will be your first professional anchor point so choose wisely - you may consider starting with a broader, more general software engineering experience before specializing to keep your options open.
I've been happy wearing safety glasses with tint. Unlike fashion glasses, safety glasses must adhere to ANSI z87.1 standards that test things like impact and UV protection.
Safety Works (used to be MSA) on Amazon are my go-to.
Reading the research, it was based on an observational study of 42 adults across three segments of musical training: None, Little (1-3 years), and Moderate (4-14) and found that "A greater amount of music training early in life was associated with the most efficient auditory function decades after training stopped."
> Employers who abuse the H-1B visa program negatively affect U.S. workers, decreasing wages and job opportunities as they import more foreign workers. To further deter and detect abuse, USCIS has established an email address which will allow individuals (including both American workers and H-1B workers who suspect they or others may be the victim of H-1B fraud or abuse) to submit tips, alleged violations and other relevant information about potential H-1B fraud or abuse. Information submitted to the email address will be used for investigations and referrals to law enforcement agencies for potential prosecution.
I wouldn't want to be responsible for managing this inbox:
Conjoint analysis is also a common approach. It requires less specific answers from customers about price points, which people are often unwilling to share.
Use good invoicing/billing software that allows you to discount on a per customer basis.
Start with two price points: one targeted at price sensitive customers, call it price A, and one targeted at price-insensitive customers (think enterprise), call it price C.
Set price A lower than you think - you can always add features and raise later to the point that people start to scream.
Set price C at much higher than you think - use volume discounting to offer discounting where needed, but this is your anchor point for conversations with big customers.
Consider whether price A is your acquisition channel or if you will have a "free" tier. If you don't have a free tier, you can feel fine with a lower than optimal price for tier A, as this is your conversion channel to price C.
Eventually you'll want a tier between A & C (call it B) to anchor pricing and encourage people to choose A or C. Refer to research on movie popcorn prices.
>You must give your consent for reports to be provided to employers. A consumer reporting agency may not give out information about you to your employer, or a potential employer, without your written consent given to the employer. Written consent generally is not required in the trucking industry. For more information, go to www.ftc.gov/credit.
https://www.consumer.ftc.gov/articles/pdf-0096-fair-credit-r...