Boston Parents Paper (and Parenting Media, Inc) is compensated for
certain paid links and advertisements on this blog.
Not exact matches
If you follow
certain links to other websites and then make a purchase from those websites, we will receive a small percentage of what you
pay to that third party (but your price will stay exactly the same).
There will be the guy that hates the board and will repeatedly accuses them of penny - pinching / misleading / talking to media too much / not giving supporters enough information; another who is adamant that we are
paying well over the odds for every player
linked (as if the transfer fee was coming out of his own pocket); and the bloke that doesn't like or want us to do business with
certain other clubs.
When you buy a product via our blog by clicking one of the images, ads, banners, or
links, Wise Jug gets a
certain commission from the product owner while you don't
pay anything extra.
This means that if you click and / or make a purchase through
certain links on this site or on the blog, I may receive a small commission although you will never
pay anything extra for any product.
This means that if you click and / or make a purchase through
certain links on this site, I may receive a small commission although you will never
pay anything extra for any product.
Hearst Television participates in various affiliate marketing programs, which means we may get
paid commissions on purchases made through our
links to I no longer have patience for
certain things, not because I've become arrogant, but simply because I reached a point in my life where I do
Almost all of them are in some way
linked to the corporations they comment positively on (Ie defense experts who get on recomending america should buy a
certain missile, then it pans out they are being
paid off by the missiles manufacturer, or health experts claiming cigarettes are harmless who pan out to be employed by a PR company working for tobacco firms, and so on).
«inherently
linked to the offer by that company of non-public urban transport services, in view of the fact that, in the first place, that company provided an application without which those drivers would not have been led to provide transport services, and the persons who wished to make an urban journey would not have used the services provided by those drivers and, in the second place, that company exercised decisive influence over the conditions under which services were provided by those drivers, inter alia by determining the maximum fare, by collecting that fare from the customer before
paying part of it to the non-professional driver of the vehicle, and by exercising a
certain control over the quality of the vehicles, the drivers and their conduct, which could, in some circumstances, result in their exclusion» (Uber France, para 21).
That
certain large legal marketing firm and other SEO companies had been using questionable tactics like spam
links,
paid back
links and... Read More»
That
certain large legal marketing firm and other SEO companies had been using questionable tactics like spam
links,
paid back
links and excessive anchor text to artificially improve page rankings.