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Honey Bunny

January 23rd, 2010

Tattoo Sleeves

Honey Bunny


Wake Up, Honey-Bunny! (Impression)*


Wake Up, Honey-Bunny! (Impression)*


$10


Wake Up, Honey-Bunny! (Impression)*

Child Honey Bunny Costume


Child Honey Bunny Costume


$29.99


Your cute little bunny will hop her way trick-or-treating with the Bunny Honey costume that comes with a long sleeve velour dress, wide accenting belt and bunny ears headpiece.

Vanilla Honey Bunny Infant Costume


Vanilla Honey Bunny Infant Costume


$29.99


Milk and honey, peaches and cream – it’s all so yummy like a snuggle bunny. Your little one will look good enough to eat in sugary sweet Vanilla Honey Bunny tuxedo inset plush romper and matching

Honey Bunny


Honey Bunny


$4.49


This book is in New – Excellent condition

Honey Bunny's Honey Bear


Honey Bunny’s Honey Bear


$2.99


This book is in New – Excellent condition

Honey+Bunny


Westland Giftware Studio H Hunny Bunnies Salt and Pepper Shaker Set, 3-Inch


Westland Giftware Studio H Hunny Bunnies Salt and Pepper Shaker Set, 3-Inch


$9.00


Hunny Bunnies Bunny Salt & Pepper Shakers S/P…

Susan Brown Designs Holiday Easter - Honey Bunny - Mugs


Susan Brown Designs Holiday Easter – Honey Bunny – Mugs



Honey Bunny Mug is new. Why drink coffee out of an ordinary mug when an imprinted mug is so much cooler? Microwave safe, FDA approved. Image is printed on both sides of the mug. Dishwasher use is not recommended….


Susan Brown Designs Holiday Easter - Honey Bunny - Tile Napkin Holders


Susan Brown Designs Holiday Easter – Honey Bunny – Tile Napkin Holders



Honey Bunny Tile Napkin Holder is measuring 6w x 6h x 4d. Made from high quality solid maple wood with satin finish and two 4.25 commercial grade mirror gloss ceramic tiles. Holds napkins, mail, letters or files. In addition, customized engraving, on the face of the item, is available on request….


Jack's Big Music Show: Let's Rock


Jack’s Big Music Show: Let’s Rock


$2.92


Includes the episodes “Groundhog Day,” “Jack & the Beanstalk,” “How Mel Got His Groove Back,” and “Little Bad Wolf.” 95 min. total. Standard; Soundtrack: English Dolby Digital stereo….



They Attract Users And, Just As Importantly, Their Private Data, Which In Turn Allows Corporations Like Google And Facebook To Sell Advertising.

Free services are a form of honey pot for online services. They attract users and, as significantly, their private data, which permits corporations like Google and Facebook to sell advertising.

A lot of users, when they even consider the exchange, treat the advertising as a minor inconvenience. They may point to TV and note that our TV broadcasting system was built on advertising, so why don't you use advertising to fund cloud-based data services?

The issue is that info isn't TV. Television was important but advertisers had little effect on anything apart from likely dumbing down the content of the shows themselves. Nevertheless the integrity of private and commercial info is vital to the working of the modern economy and the necessity for advertising has a range of toxic effects on the data services provided to consumers.

In my Price of Lost Privacy series, I highlighted the indirect effect of firms like Google using that private data and behavioral marketing to permit advertisers like subprime banks to live on exposed populations and increase economic inequality. But advertising has a less convoluted effect that makes most online data services less functional for all users and potentially harmful in their broader effects on data integrity and the infrastructure of the web itself.

Deliberate Lack of Security in Data Services : The need to collect user information to share it with advertisers implies online companies purposively avoid encryption and other measures that would better protect user data. After technology analyst Chris Soghoian published a Times op-ed noting that most hacks didn't recognise the absence of security in online services, Google's top D.C. Privacy lobbyist, William DeVries, wrote on his own Google+ page that Chris was "dead right. Journalists (and blog authors, and small companies) need to take a couple hours and learn to use free, widely available safety measures to store data and communicate."

The question, as Soghoian pointed out on his own site in a follow-up post, is that Google products aren't secure out of the box on purpose "because the corporation's business design depends upon the monetization of user data, the company keeps as much info as practical about the activities of its users. These detailed notes aren't just handy to Google's engineers and advertising groups, but are also a mouth-watering target for law enforcement agencies." Vint Cerf, Google's "Chief Internet Evangelist" admitted latterly on a panel that "we couldn't run our system if everything in it were encrypted because then we wouldn't know which adverts to show you. So this is a system that was designed around a selected business model."

This suggests not only repressive governments can more easily get access to your info but ID thieves and other black hat hackers can as well . Site after site asks for user names and passwords, many users repeating the same password, so that hacking one unsecure site suddenly opens every online account to theft and vandalism.

Shortage of Online Anonymity : Tied into the requirement to sell to advertisers is the rocketing refusal of online services to permit incognito users. "On the Internet, Nobody Knows You're a Dog" -- once the standard joke about anonymity online -- has give way to a Large Brother-ish requirement for continual identity checks by web sites.

Google's need that only "real names" be employed in online Google+ accounts is the most recent example of this, with Ceo Eric Schmidt admitting recently in an interview that the reason is to make it an "identity service" to sell folk things:. As Schmidt explained :

"if we knew that this was a genuine person, then we could sort of hold them responsible, we could check them, we could give them things, we could you know bill them, you know we might have credit cards and so forth."

"Apple and Google both seem enthusiastic about NFC technology (near-field communication)," writes, Mathew Ingram at the site Gigomon, "which turns portable gadgets into electronic wallets, and having a social network tied to an individual user's identity would come in handy."

This hard-line against anonymity means that the perspectives of political dissidents or worker whistleblowers who don't want their names exposed are silenced in such environments, all for the sake of making advertisers content and facilitating e-business by online firms.

Bad Website Design : It's not as life-threatening an issue, but advertising drives web design (in Croatian translate web dizajn) that is repugnant, confusing and time-consuming for users. To maximise "page views" that can each hold advertising and generate advertising income, articles are parsed into multiple pages. The Columbia Journalism Review describes an identical "Faustian bargain" of the proliferation of multiple-page "slide shows" to in a similar way generate multiple pages to generate ad bucks.

This is mixed with pages where adverts rule more display space, where as the Knight Digital Media Center explains, ""As news operations scrabble for revenue, advertisers have gained leverage to demand more--and more prominent--digital space. The resulting ad-heavy homepages make business sense--but the result is visually 'appalling.'"

Bracing the "Tawdry" Side of Capitalism : Web visionary Jaron Lanier, who has been writing about the Web since before most people ever heard of its existence, disagrees that such identity-based appeals by corporations gives advertising a crap name. He disagreed in an interview 1 or 2 months back :

Google's thing isn't advertising because it's not a romanticizing operation. It doesn't involve expression... It's a little small minimalist link, and essentially what they are selling isn't advertising, they are not selling romance, they are not selling communication, what they are doing is selling access..."You give us money, we give you access to these folk, and then what you do with them is up to you."

Lanier observes that corporations exploiting such identity-based access aren't generally from the "dignified side of capitalism" but rather "tend to be a large amount of ambulance chasers and snake oil salesmen."

So chasing those low-road advertisers, we see many online data services building web sites that are less secure, less functional, uglier and undermine political liberty in the service of the wants of those advertisers.

A Substitute for Advertising : The rise of paid programs has shown one alternative road where little payments by users inspire firms to design services only in the interests of users rather than 3rd party advertisers. Even services at once on the web often utilise a "freemium" model that eschews advertising in favour of providing basic free services to any user, while gaining revenue from a smaller subset of users who like the service enough to pay a subscription to unlock more advanced features.

To encourage that alternative of Web design solely In the interests of users, we need policy to better preserve user privacy so that no company can track or share user info without that user's direct opt-in to every use of their data. Clearer transactions around loss of user data to advertisers (and probably to hackers and ID thieves due to absence of security) will encourage more of those users to choose better-designed and safer paid choices as reported tagza.com.



 1989 Introductions


1989 Introductions


$19.99


Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher's book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: World Wide Web, Intel 80486, Krusty the Clown, Barney Gumble, Santa's Little Helper, Wallace and Gromit, Atari Lynx, Poqet Pc, Mega Drive, Simcity, Prince of Persia, Ariel, Montgomery Burns, Kidou Keiji Jiban, Collaboratory, Poison, Earthbound, Ned Flanders, Janine Butcher, Ghost Hunt, the Prince, Motorola Microtac, Game Boy, Seymour Skinner, Carnegie Collection, Sim, Bana-Mighdall, Heroquest, Mike Haggar, Aasi Jetcruzer, After Dark, Atari Portfolio, Energizer Bunny, Gulf Breeze, Honey Bunches of Oats, Utopia, Barnyard Commandos, Trajan, Reebok Pump, Compaq Lte, 651 Series, Mega Force, Max Eckhardt, Pull-Ups Training Pants, 311 Series, Pocket Dragons, Outbound Laptop, Computer Warriors, 221 Series, St Book, Alicia Hunt, Atari Stacy, Electric Youth, Danzka, Standard Interchange Language, Eagle, Osaka Monorail 1000 Series, Amstrad Pc2286, Grand Hikari. Excerpt: The 221 series (221? ) is a suburban EMU operated by West Japan Railway Company (JR West) in the Kansai Region of Japan.See also (online edition) References (URLs online) A hyperlinked version of this chapter is at The 311 series (311? ) is a DC suburban electric multiple unit operated by Central Japan Railway Company (JR Central) in Japan. The design was developed from the earlier 211 series, with the first five trains introduced from July 1989 to replace older 113 and 115 series EMUs. Eight more sets were introduced from the start of the new timetable in March 1990, and a further two sets were introduced in March 1991. Formation Between June 2006 and July 2008, all sets had their original lozenge pantographs replaced with single-arm pantographs. See also (online edition) References (URLs online) A hyperlinked version of this chapter is at The 651 series (651? ) is an AC /DC dual-voltage EMU operated by East Japan

 Al-The-Gator and Honey Bunny


Al-The-Gator and Honey Bunny


$19.38


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