inmemoryofradio
Joined Aug. 26, 2007
reviews
comments
favorites
Comments
-
8 months agoinmemoryofradio's comment on:
Collin County official victim of website prank
@tallscot,
LOL. My name is Shannon Hollis. Although, you probably don't want to mess with that lady's romance novel writing business. Looks like she makes a decent amount of change. Enough to afford decent lawyers I'm guessing.
Anyway, if you forget to protect yourself when you set your domain up then there's always ICANN's Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy. I don't think Mr. Self would have any issue proving the three elements needed to gain control of the offending domains. Although, for $100 or less he could have avoided the whole fiasco.
-
8 months agoinmemoryofradio's comment on:
Collin County official victim of website prank
I love it when people leave their keys in a running car and then decry the foul state of the world and scream persecution once the car is stolen.
I don't know anything about Keith Self or Collin County politics(thank god), but any self-respecting web professional/marketing department interested in protecting a name, brand or trademark knows to register at least the .com, .org, .net and .info top level domains.
Sure, the prank was cowardly and childish( I mean, think about it. It could have been far worse), but he left himself open.
Not sure I'd be screaming about how people are out to get me based on this. But hey, any way you want to sell your tin-foil hats.
-
9 months, 3 weeks agoinmemoryofradio's comment on:
New respect for A-Rod for admitting steroid use, less respect for Major League Baseball and Bud Selig
Yeah, I respected the guy when I thought he was just a great talent and, for the most part, a (relatively)class act. That's when he was repeatedly telling us that he'd never used steroids despite every reporter in America asking him that specific question. Now, when it's dead obvious that he did use, he garners respect by admitting his 'mistake' and saying he's sorry? Sorry, had your chance. Missed it. Goodbye A-Fraud.



Musicians protest taped music at Texas Ballet Theater's The Nutcracker
At the premiere in 1890-something, ushers passed out sheet music and the audience had to memorize the score before the curtain went up.