Tweety Copyright Things

Parislemon says it all with his latest TechCrunch post, “Sometimes I just want to copy someone else’s status, word for word, and see if they notice.” Twitter’s got its newest craze, typing the same exact letters this above phrase shows; Parislemon, a.k.a MG Siegler described this phenomenon a bit too funny that only generally shows how the human mind works. We have this basic nature, instinct or habit if we may call it, of doing things that we thought could make us a one hit maker but totally borrowing these ideas from the others. This can be solely significant, but for some, they just enjoy the ease of copying, the ease of seemingly being cute on their own rights, or may be just a little silly stunt to pass time on.

Some people just totally love seeing this same old words come from different users, tweet retweeted and stuff but for some, this trend is pretty annoying and a bit absurd and ridiculously silly. Just so I say, what if a copyright for even a three letter tweet would be established? Mimicry is a sensitive issue, you might feel happy doing the same ideas others have done but what do think the source might have felt by your game?

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The Online Vehicle

What is the oldest paying you could give? I say is still that Barter system started by the Chinese folks over other countries using same old objects traded to other identically defined as having the same market value as the target object you may want to acquire. After this old ancient system, comes the role of huge heavy authentically gold and silver made coins, slowly became smaller and lighter then finally turning up into paper becoming more portable and easily pocket carried things with respective values and certain amounts we now call money. After these paper and coins, developers also had their way inventing cards that can store up any amount you may want to and today, we also have this system available online through the prestigious PayPal company.

Maggie Shiels of BBC news shares a the humble beginnings and the promising future this online paying company has to offer the author called as impressive ambitions. The story featured a long rolled, detailed and concise, beautifully shared interview with PayPal president Scott Thompson. The president shared the company’s brief history and also shared the company’s vision to hold on to any form of online paying sytem and money interactions as far as they could possibly can.

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Sorting out over a Field of Colorful Grains

A friend’s favorite idiom would always sound as “finding a small-headed needle over a pile of haystack”… would always post a question of the famous line’s relevance to life aside from it resembles a bachelor picking up a perfect potential bride from a football arena full of single, desperate women or a fisherman who casted his fishing rod over an afternoon delight just to catch his son’s accidentally freed goldfish. It isn’t really a nice good job looking for one or few precious things over piles of rubbish distracting objects.
As Worthan’s introduction with a particular social web data related discussion, it is really a second distanced event that users would fire up various information of any kind, useless and of course, some few significant and relevant ones. Simple posts and shares on the net could always turn useful in time just so authorities could find ways of saving these data on demand. An Ascher then was interested on investing on finding ways to filter those million dot data streamed in the web almost every millisecond a day. the idea of having a saving storage that would go on 24/7 till eternity seems to be a far far milled goal to accomplish; too much it is like finding a transparent grain over a pile of brightly colored ones.

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