By publishing Motiv's response letter and supporting documentation, Motiv and EFF hope that others may benefit and
not pay the troll under the bridge.
Not exact matches
Don't
pay any attention to «pervert alert» — it's a bitchy little
troll that wanders in every so often when the middle school kids are bored and get extra comp time at the library.
You're obviously
not dues
paying if you're announcing you're a
troll and then go and make a stupid post.
Either you're a republican
troll or you really weren't
paying that much attention if you think this started 4 years ago.
I'm here to
pay my respect I just wish the
troll had been banned and wasn't allowed to even be on this thread let alone cut and paste things that has no meaning to him.While he's allowed to operate Roms's a disgrace it makes me ill he's allowed on this thread
The
paid troll here is much like Joe P. in that Joe didn't work for the state either yet he maintained an office.
Trum the
paid troll wants the US to be a socialist haven but after him there's
not much support for that.
You're arguing with a
paid troll, meaning you can't win.
Since you're a
paid troll I know you'll follow but
not with original comments you'll just spam mine like the loser you are.
Honestly, I never understood the lulu hype, I was one of those people who was like «it's just leggings» (don't hate me) and never really understood why people
paid $ 100 for leggings... I kins of think that leggings, tights, socks and underwear (and tampons) should be free lol so I hate spending money on them and buy the cheapest ones I can find — like I
troll the $ 3 bin at forever 21 or search amazon for $ 5 tights and target for $ 2 tights... because, cheap!
Don't miss: Extras include a making of featurette on «
Troll,» a commentary track on «
Troll 2» and a DVD of «Best Worst Movie,» a fun documentary that
pays tribute to «
Troll 2» and the people who made it.
Readers
trolling Amazon and B &
N have become numb to this low price point, with some readers expecting to
pay no more than $ 0.99 - $ 1.99.
Kristen, you didn't demand used book sellers
pay a percentage to the author; Amanda, you didn't direct
trolls to Ms. Lamb's spot.
Not a
troll but a
paid review mill worker who posted on the wrong page.
I haven't
trolled too much through your other articles for similarly situationed folks, but as someone on active duty (Army) I am exempt from
paying income taxes from my state of residence (Oregon) while I serve on active duty.
There is momentum for a buyout that would
pay them to switch to
trolling gear that does
not catch bluefins, and would help them market their catch.
After all, if you were going to
pay someone to
troll, wouldn't you hire someone who is competent at it?
We TOLD you nothing would happen if you didn't listen to us, but I don't really
pay attention, I'm
not really listeng to them, another
troll carefully explaining that if we convert to coal to gas plus burn all the oil plus shut down all the nuclear reactors it will happen in 90 years... and there ought to be one comment from Khartoum complaining that my instructions on how to build a quinzie should have included the fact that it generates its own heat source from within and melts almost instantly, and is there any way to harness this commercially because it appears to be perpetual motion, free energy, maybe we can use it to heat the planet because there's an ice age coming and it turns out the CO2 is pretty much useless.
Patent
trolling by opportunistic litigants, who acquire patents
not to create products but to pursue a
pay - off, is a worrying drain on innovation
As a result, many companies have chosen to simply hold their nose and
pay the
trolls — those who didn't often landed in the patent swamps of East Texas, where lawyers and plaintiff - friendly juries have built a cottage industry based around multimillion dollar verdicts.
By having people
pay to access the platform, one hope is that
trolls won't
pay actual money to
troll, Lacy said.
Anybody that is calling another a patent
troll is just someone trying to steal another's hard work, and doesn't want to
pay them.
Even if the
troll were to litigate these cases, most of the podcasters don't make enough money to
pay off the kind of damages that would justify the cost of litigation.
Require
trolls to
pay for the discovery they request beyond core documents so that they can
not run up costs just to force a settlement.
Congress needs to address «patent
trolls» — firms that buy patents for things they didn't invent, then threaten to sue innocent companies unless they
pay a licensing fee.
The state of Vermont has decided to join private companies like Twitter in taking the fight to patent
trolls — shell companies that don't do anything except use old patents to extort businesses into
paying licenses for common technology.
«We just didn't imagine this vast anyone - can - advertise - to - anyone platform might be used by Kremlin agents — even though, well, they
paid us in Rubles and hailed from a known pro-Putin
troll farm,» it now finds itself having to say.
Why
not just make it so that the patent
trolls have to
pay all fees regarding the trial if they lose?
For some well funded
trolls or NPE's, the prospect of
paying attorney's fees may
not discourage filing suit.
Every dollar spent fighting or
paying off a
troll is a dollar
not spent on launching new products and creating jobs.
Often, companies that get sued or threatened by patent
trolls will end up
paying a licensing fee, even though they don't think the patents are legitimate.
Often, these developers can
not afford the time and money it takes to fight the
trolls, leaving them with a stark choice:
pay up or go out of business.