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Or is it just one of Phil's balls in my throat?
IGN user comments, man come on lol.
It's astroturfing if Pro-Xbox, but normal if anti-xbox. Correct?your expert is welcome to
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Seriously though there's nothing wrong with pointing out how weird it is we suddenly have an army of pro-Xbox self-styled M&A/stock market gurus all coming out of the wodworks around the same time.
The astroturfing is so intense I feel like booting up my old copy of FIFA.
How do you prove it? I did ask for evidence. It's one thing to casually make claims about it vaguely, but you're picking out specific people and literally calling to get them banned. I thought Evilore just approved like 1500 accounts, so of course there's a lot of new accounts. I don't know if you looked at the front page, but there's nothing to talk about but this and maybe Exoprimal tomorrow. Are we truly at the point where we just have to endlessly watch a small group of people witchhunt over and over with no evidence? It's disgusting. And he's a new member so it's not like he wants to defend himself and start arguing, because then you win again. At the very least explain your evidence if you want to start threatening people.your expert is welcome to
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Seriously though there's nothing wrong with pointing out how weird it is we suddenly have an army of pro-Xbox self-styled M&A/stock market gurus.
The astroturfing is so intense I feel like booting up my old copy of FIFA.
Yeah are there any good YouTube comments we can read?IGN user comments, man come on lol.
2017.Yeah really bizarre, Jumeira wasn't interested in interactions on GAF from December 2017 onward and then suddenly reappeared back and only wants to post in this merger thread.
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A single word in a statute / contract, heck even the placement of a comma, can have significant legal implications. On top of that, case law sometimes "interprets" the words / commas in ways that leaves the lawyers (and sometimes the trial judges who are required to follow precedent) scratching their heads. If it feels stupid I promise you there are tons of people, lawyers and even judges included, who would agree at times. Not all the time, but definitely some of it.She never said "they will" either. Now people are equating "it will" to "Reasonable probability that it will" (what was actually said.)
However it will be pointed out the ruling the precedent is based on said "might" not "may" (of course, total synonyms, but for some reason people don't understand that here.)
The whole thing is stupid, I truly can't believe that people don't understand that the "Reasonable probability" part of the sentence is the only thing that matters.
If any of my employees kept promising a "Reasonable probability" of something and didn't complete it ever, and said:
"Well boss, you see what I said was Reasonable probability that it MIGHT happen not that a reasonable probability it WILL" as an excuse I'd fire their ass.
I truly do wonder if I'm talking to people who have English as a first language here sometimes. Don't mean any offense to that, other than it's pretty damn confusing why people can't get this lol
Clayton Act sec. 7 and case law from rulings as recent as AT&T. Was cited a few times I believe. Specifically point 2:Where are people actually getting the "Reasonable probability that it will" vs. "Reasonable probability that it might" aspect from anyways?
Is this from TV talking heads? Forum / Twitter lawyers?
Yeah are there any good YouTube comments we can read?
Maybe some gutter trash local news station comments?
This forum man.. obsessed with finding idiots to discuss.
LOL for perspective, they spend over $877 billion on the military, a few million for the work the FTC does is peanuts. The FTC has an annual budget of $430 million.I'm not american but this taxpayer money should move this shit faster, just saying.![]()
She never said "they will" either. Now people are equating "it will" to "Reasonable probability that it will" (what was actually said.)
However it will be pointed out the ruling the precedent is based on said "might" not "may" (of course, total synonyms, but for some reason people don't understand that here.)
The whole thing is stupid, I truly can't believe that people don't understand that the "Reasonable probability" part of the sentence is the only thing that matters.
If any of my employees kept promising a "Reasonable probability" of something and didn't complete it ever, and said:
"Well boss, you see what I said was Reasonable probability that it MIGHT happen not that a reasonable probability it WILL" as an excuse I'd fire their ass.
I truly do wonder if I'm talking to people who have English as a first language here sometimes. Don't mean any offense to that, other than it's pretty damn confusing why people can't get this lol
How do you prove it? I did ask for evidence. It's one thing to casually make claims about it vaguely, but you're picking out specific people and literally calling to get them banned. I thought Evilore just approved like 1500 accounts, so of course there's a lot of new accounts. I don't know if you looked at the front page, but there's nothing to talk about but this and maybe Exoprimal tomorrow. Are we truly at the point where we just have to endlessly watch a small group of people witchhunt over and over with no evidence? It's disgusting. And he's a new member so it's not like he wants to defend himself and start arguing, because then you win again. At the very least explain your evidence if you want to start threatening people.
Beep boopIGN user comments, man come on lol.
If their argument is that the judge set a higher standard of proof than what the law outlines by using the words "will" in certain instances, then it's a weak argument as the judges verdict shows the standard pretty blantly.
With that said, we don't know for sure what the basis of FTC's appeal actually is. It could be based on something else entirely.
Clayton Act sec. 7 and case law from rulings as recent as AT&T. Was cited a few times I believe. Specifically point 2:
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That's my understanding at least
A single word in a statute / contract, heck even the placement of a comma, can have significant legal implications. On top of that, case law sometimes "interprets" the words / commas in ways that leaves the lawyers (and sometimes the trial judges who are required to follow precedent) scratching their heads. If it feels stupid I promise you there are tons of people, lawyers and even judges included, who would agree at times. Not all the time, but definitely some of it.
All of that said, I want to make clear that I do not know the exact language in either the statute or judge's ruling. I love shooting the shit when I can about this stuff. But I'm not spending days reading hundreds of pages of legal documents for a case that I only care about because I refuse to grow up and give up my games.
No, the argument is that when the judge quoted the law, she applied an incorrect interpretation. This is where she quoted the law and then changed the condition of that law from "may" to "will probably".
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because I refuse to grow up and give up my games.
That's a bit unfortunate since I never said it to get them or anyone else banned. Personally I'd rather (if Jumeira was some sort of alt/bought account) that they are just left on here. Their conduct will show them up as who they really are over time and then people will know they're not genuine. That's much better than simply banning them (but I'm not a mod and it's not my decision obviously).
I'm sure you can figure out exactly what I'm talking about. Maybe spend a little more time talking about the subject matter of the thread, and less time trying to orchestrate witchhunts for new members.1) How do I prove what?
Makes sense. We'll see if the difference in wording is enough to grant them an appeal. Could be tough considering "may" and "probably will" are so close in meaning.
Sorry I'm frustrated from a convo yesterday not anything you said.Thanks for the explanation of what exactly the contention is. I was just basing my response off of what the poster I quoted was saying. I didn't read anything on that besides that twitter thread and was assuming the "will" vs "may" was the sticking point in all of this.
And yes, English is my first language.
The FTC is after ChatGPT as well nowHas anyone asked chat gpt to write them a ruling denying a PI for the merger?![]()
What exactly is the contention then because the poster I quoted said "Law says the FTC doesn't need to prove Microsoft will foreclose and harm competition, it says FTC needs to prove Microsoft may foreclose and harm competition." When the judge very clearly said "may" and not "will" in her conclusion.
Actually, her ruling is riddled with contradictions and conflation.
Also, a lower burden of proof would be favorable for the FTC. Unless you actually meant that the judges words made the burden of proof higher.
Psygnosis.... Sony Too... Taxpayer$.Has anyone asked chat gpt to write them a ruling denying a PI for the merger?![]()
Yeah, it came back as "waste of taxpayers money."Has anyone asked chat gpt to write them a ruling denying a PI for the merger?![]()
around 17% of the us budget is military, health (including medicare and medicaid) is about 28%, and social security is 25%. Everything else is in the remaining percentage.LOL for perspective, they spend over $877 billion on the military, a few million for the work the FTC does is peanuts. The FTC has an annual budget of $430 million.
Ignorance, bots and shills parrot the corpo executive script on message boards, social media and comment sections.America the land of tax the poor, while bailing out the rich.
#wasteoftaxpayermoney
If the standard is properly laid out in paragraph 2, then I would absolutely agree the judge got this wrong. An "appreciable danger of [anticompetitive] consequences in the future" screams low threshold. It suggests if the FTC is worried, and there is a chance they could be right, they should be allowed to investigate. And the amount of consumers who could lose access is material. And the defendant literally did the exact same thing after Bethesda that they suggested was not their intent when buying that company.Clayton Act sec. 7 and case law from rulings as recent as AT&T. Was cited a few times I believe. Specifically point 2:
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That's my understanding at least
It is not on the stock... it was on stock options. It jumped from 83 to 92, this is exponential on options.ABK was sitting at ~84 last week, its now at ~90 dollars. $1000 investment in this stock is not going to build you wealth.
I wonder why that is? Doesn't seem very impartial.by declaring that she believes everything MS says.
Much of law is based on verbal thresholds like that. could and probably indicate two vastly different meanings. In much of modern communication, you would not use could and probably interchangeably.
And this goes back to what I was saying yesterday.snip
I still cannot fathom how a judge would ever decide a case involving a company their child works for and I never will. It feels so absurd to me that I really wonder if it is even true.I wonder why that is? Doesn't seem very impartial.
Whats the argument?oh shiiit i just have the perfect argument for the FTC to win. Too bad they are a bunch of inepts.
Much of law is based on verbal thresholds like that. could and probably indicate two vastly different meanings. In much of modern communication, you would not use could and probably interchangeably.
As a personal example, if a friends gas tank was on empty and they asked you if you thought they could make it to the gas station, you would say "you could run out of gas" - but if they ask you if they can drive to a town 50 miles away, you would say "you will probably run out of gas".
As a professional example, a doctor using could and probably interchangeably when making a diagnosis or discussing the dangers of specific treatments would be extremely unprofessional and *could* (lol) lead to law issues.
no, lol, thats not how sentence structure works. You cant just cut out the bit you dont agree with.That's fine we can come up with other examples where the concept makes sense for this to matter.
To me it absolutely does not matter between the 2 sentences being debated because "reasonably probability" is clearly the core part of the sentence meant to actually imply the "probability."
If there intent was to LESSEN that by then throwing a "might" at the end of the sentence they need to change the law.
no, lol, thats not how sentence structure works. You cant just cut out the bit you dont agree with.
"reasonable probability that it WOULD" is the polar opposite of the term "reasonable probability that it WOULD NOT"
and the changes in the sentence are differences in the words following the term "reasonable probability"
What's their market cap?LOL for perspective, they spend over $877 billion on the military, a few million for the work the FTC does is peanuts. The FTC has an annual budget of $430 million.
It has started
Because in America, judges know they have this leverage and more often than not, won't be challenged, or recuse themselves.I still cannot fathom how a judge would ever decide a case involving a company their child works for and I never will. It feels so absurd to me that I really wonder if it is even true.
Jeff Hauser, founder and director of the Revolving Door Project, argued that the agency could have faced blowback if it tried and failed to get Corley to recuse from the case.
"Nothing antagonizes a judge with whom you might have litigation in the future like calling them recklessly biased," he said. "What are the odds that Judge Corley would recuse if she was already choosing to brazen her way through this apparent conflict of interest?"
Many states, along with the federal courts, also lack procedural safeguards for resolving recusal motions filed by litigants. Most often, it is the judges themselves who assess their own biases without any independent review.