Sentences with phrase «too much latitude»

«Part of the issue is whether the consent model that we have in Canada currently gives too much latitude to companies based on long privacy policies to craft a contract whereby they say they have consent to use it for other purposes.»
Comment: The proposed definition of «more stringent» was criticized as affording too much latitude to for granting exceptions for state laws that are not protective of privacy.
[DC: I no doubt erred in giving Pete too much latitude in his wild accusations and personal insults.
I think my point was that allowing management too much latitude in regards to dividend growth is a bad idea.
4) The language on capital targets is weak, and allows the banks way too much latitude in performing their own calculations.
Critics argue that this arrangement gives the Vatican too much latitude to impose its Catholic positions on the Italian public.
Kids given too much latitude, such as regularly staying at a friend's house after school with no adults present, were more likely to engage in riskier behaviors.
• In our story on European migration, we gave a little too much latitude to the labels on the accompanying map (14 June, p 14).
We no longer rely upon doctors to completely police themselves because the exact same types of abuses occurred that are routinely seen in midwifery, although some would argue they still have too much latitude in that direction.
Risk - averse brands will want to think twice before privileging Twitter interactions or giving their Twitter team too much latitude.

Not exact matches

Depending upon where you live and how dark your skin is, going outside regularly may be all that is required for you or your baby to generate adequate amounts of vitamin D. However, one of the problems with getting your vitamin D with sun exposure is simply that it's hard to determine how much time outside is needed since it depends on so many factors (skin tone, latitude, time of year, how much skin is exposed, amount of air pollution, etc.) Keep in mind that there is also a concern of sunburn and increased risk of skin cancer with too much sun exposure.
In California there is too much of it and in Korea, a winter country at a slightly higher latitude, there is not enough.
Ice models do take account of incident angle but seem to model the angle largely on some lower latitude Atlantic sea measurements where wind makes the surface choppy enough that there's not too much of the low incidence where this happens.
For many sceptics, too much rests on the claim, however true it is, which is in the first place a question of degree with a considerable amount of latitude, even within the «scientific consensus».
Then if you compare the warming by latitude from 1900, you see that CO2 forcing is non-linear, IF you assume too much impact of CO2.
So where Latitude says «We know,» he is flat out incorrect, and where he says «plants grow better at higher CO2,» he is leaving out too much from his summary to do anything but mislead, and where he says «which would include plankton,» there too he is flat out ignorant.
Such models generally have a resolution of about 1 — 3 ° in latitude and longitude — too coarse to offer much guidance to people.
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