Society's Child
In any conversation about our online privacy, it is important to remember that our modern surveillance state was not born of the online revolution. It was alive and well long before the web era in the form of the massive data broker industry that buys and sells everything from our purchase records to our medical history. Social media merely honed and weaponized it.
Despite its transparency pledges, Facebook offers little detail about where all of the detail it obtains about us comes from. For a number of years it purchased data from many of the largest data brokers, assembling perhaps the single largest intelligence database in the world.
Amazon confirmed in an email to CNBC that the company is getting rid of incentive pay and stock option awards as it increases the minimum wage to $15 per hour. The company, however, stressed that the wage increase "more than compensates" for the loss in other benefits.
"The significant increase in hourly cash wages more than compensates for the phase out of incentive pay and [restrictive stock units]," Amazon's spokesperson said in an emailed statement. "We can confirm that all hourly Operations and Customer Service employees will see an increase in their total compensation as a result of this announcement. In addition, because it's no longer incentive-based, the compensation will be more immediate and predictable."

Participants in a protest in Simferopol against missile strikes on Syria burn the image of US President Donald Trump
The share of Russians who describe their attitude to the US as positive fell from 41 percent in 2017 to just 21 percent this year, according to the paper published by Washington-based "fact-tank" Pew Research Center.
Analysts noted that the US reputation among Russians is approaching the historical low of 19 percent, registered in 2014, right after the reunification of Russia and Crimea and subsequent Western sanctions.
Comment: 88 percent of Americans are going to be really disappointed.
However, the demographic behaviour of recent years was strongly influenced by the economic crisis, but in the coming years should be "normalised".
According to the Independent Authority of Fiscal Responsibility (AIReF), far from losing population, Spain will continue to gain population in the coming decades thanks to the increase in fertility and, especially, thanks to immigration, which will provide between 7 and 10 million people through 2050.
The AIReF considers that the total population of Spain will increase between 4 and 13 million people in 30 years, so that it will reach between 51 and 60 million people by 2050. Immigration will be "fundamental" to maintain this population gain.
Comment: While one needs to be cautious about the article's final comment regarding a 'takeover by Islam', what is clear is that unchecked mass migration, particularly from countries with vastly different cultural and economic backgrounds, is having ruinous effects on an already strained Europe:
- Immigration, Crime and Propaganda
- The Scourge of Modern 'Liberalism' in France
- Terrorism, Immigration and Racism in Canada: The Backlash has Begun
- Why Russia grants temporary status to refugees
- While Western countries freak out at prospect of integrating tiny Muslim minorities, Islam thrives in Putin's Russia
- Muslims have lived peacefully in Russia for centuries so what is the West doing wrong?
- "This is what I am paid to do": Italy's Salvini challenges prosecutor after blocking migrant ship carrying 190 mostly male Africans
Police said that 2,000 people gathered for Thursday's unsanctioned demonstration outside the regional government building, some on horseback and carrying Ingushetia flags, in opposition to the land exchange deal with Chechnya, signed on September 26.
Russian media reported that scuffles broke out between demonstrators and the security staff of Ingushetia head Yunus-Bek Yevkurov, who released several bursts of rifle fire.

Indonesian police guard a petrol station as people queue for fuel in Palu.
At least 1,424 people are so far reported to have died from the 7.5 magnitude earthquake and subsequent tsunami that hit the Indonesian island on Friday. At least a further 2,500 have been injured and more than 100 are still missing.
More than 70,000 houses are damaged, leaving tens of thousands homeless and resorting to living in tents and shelters, with no clear idea when they will be able to begin rebuilding their homes. Makeshift shelters built from earthquake debris have sprung up across the island, while clean drinking water and food supplies remain scarce and people have been forced to queue for fuel for over 12 hours in some cases.
As the situation worsens by the day, survivors expressed hope that more government and international aid would be able to reach the area imminently.
However, despite millions of dollars in aid pledged by the UN and countries such as the US, China, Australia, UK and New Zealand, there have been delays in aid reaching the affected ares, due to difficulties transporting it into the area. Most roads were destroyed and the tiny airport in Palu was pushed to maximum capacity after being damaged in the quake.
Investigations by the All India Institute of Medical Sciences suggests that there were 259 selfie-related deaths in 137 incidents from October 2011 to November 2017.
A total of 98 people died a selfie-related death in 2016.
The findings, published in the Journal of Family Medicine and Primary Care, were collated by tracking references to "selfie deaths" and "selfie accidents" in news reports from around the world.
Drowning, fire and falling are among the most commonly listed causes of death in these circumstances, and it is far more common for men to die trying to take a selfie than women.
Of the recorded deaths, 72.5 per cent were among men, and only 27.5 per cent among women, with men found to be more prone to risky behaviour when taking selfies.

Members of animal rights group'Vegan 269 Life France' during a protest against cruelty to animals in Paris
The attack in a quiet town of Saint-Arnoult-en-Yvelines, 30 miles southwest of Paris, took place at 3am and startled butcher's shop owner Elisabeth Cure as she slept above the business.
As in other similar incidents around France during the last year, her tormentors left a tell-tale tag scrawled on the shopfront which read: 'End the Repression'.
'That's how I knew it was radical vegans,' she told AFP.
According to multiple media reports, Bruhl-Daniels met Diya in Dubai in 2016 while working at the US consulate there. She had been a special agent for nine years and had top-security clearance with access to sensitive information on some subjects.
Diya was trying to get a tourist visa to visit the United States. Court documents say that Bruhl-Daniels contacted officials at the State Department and Department of Homeland Security (DHS), who informed her that both the DHS and FBI had their eyes on Diya in a counterterrorism probe.
Bruhl-Daniels, despite being told to "Stay away from Diya," went on to form a romantic relationship with him and told him that if he came to the US he would be arrested.
Football icon Ronaldo is being sued by Kathryn Mayorga, 34, over the incident which allegedly took place in a Vegas penthouse suit in 2009, after a night of partying.
Las Vegas police confirmed that a they have reopened a sexual assault case from the same year, as per the request of the woman named in the suit made last month, AP reports.
Comment: According to RT Ronaldo continues to firmly deny the charges:
Football star Cristiano Ronaldo has tweeted his 'firm denial' of the accusations of rape of an American woman, saying that the 'abominal crime' goes against 'everything I am'.
Ronaldo tweeted on Wednesday: "I firmly deny the accusations being issued against me. Rape is an abominable crime that goes against everything that I am and believe in. Keen as I may be to clear my name, I refuse to feed the media spectacle created by people seeking to promote themselves at my expense."
The player then followed that tweet with a further post referencing the situation: "My clear conscious will thereby allow me to await with tranquillity the results of any and all investigations," he wrote.












Comment: It had to come with a catch. No way would Amazon give a no-strings-attached pay raise without taking something else away from their employees.
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