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mzbr Are lap dances tax-exempt art N.Y. court to rule
« le: Décembre 27, 2024, 04:59:56 pm »
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 After two days of holding onto three packages of $640,000 that fell from an armored truck, a worried and remorseful man took the money  still wrapped in plastic  back Friday.   Federal prosecutors decided not to press criminal charges against the man, an office worker, after reviewing the evidence.   The money had been missing since Wednesday morning when it fell out of a back door of an AT Systems armored truck that had just left the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland to make deliveries. The truck s door had somehow opened and closed again, the FBI said. The driver went a few more blocks before discovering the problem.   K stanley cups uk en Kennard, the bank s security director, said he received a telephone call about 7 a.m. Friday from the man, who wa kubki stanley s at a pay phone outside of the Fed s bank building downtown.    He said he had the money and he was concerned that he may not have done the right thing. And he wanted some help and guidance as to what to do,  Kennard said.            After talking to him for a few minutes, I convinced him to come to the bank. He had the money in his vehicle. He came to the bank, we talked a little bit, we called the FBI and they took over from there.    The man s name was not disclosed, nor would the FBI discuss any personal aspect of his background.   Kennard said the man drove his car to the  stanley cups docks at the rear of the building, where Federal Reserve security guards watched it until FBI agents took the three money packages from the back seat into the federal ba Fgzg Ayatollah: Wall St. protests toppling capitalism
 The US Patent and Trademark Office  USPTO  is no stranger to making generally awful  and excessive  patenting decisions, but that doesn ;t make its latest grant any less absurd. Amazon has officially been granted a patent for its brilliant idea to 8230; take photos on a white background.     Whether it   a testament to the skill of Amazon   IP attorneys or the fact that the USPTO can be wildly ineffective, photographers have been up in arms ever since the details of the patent鈥攙aguely  and appropri kubki stanley ately  dubbed Studio arrangement鈥攚ere released. Basically, the patent lists in absurd detail every condition needed to fulfill Amazon    arguably  signature technique. The details go into everything from the F-stop to ISO value to focal length. It even goes into the exact geometry of every lens, stand, and light source. This is just one se stanley cup ntence from the nine-page application: And while all that might seem ridiculous, there is a loose method to Amazon   madness. It tries to set itself apart by explaining that previous art would often useimage retouching and green screens. Tech Dirt explains: Amazon   technique is apparently the purest of the pure, being only the photographer, the photographed object/person, the white background, a number of front lights/back lights and some sort of object separating the subject from the ground below it. But while Amazon almost undoub stanley mug tedly did not pioneer this technique as they claim, the fact remains that there is