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 1  Check out tricky intersections This is one we do all the time鈥攃hecking out the layout of tricky city intersections before a road trip, to be sure we know where were going. Even with the best mapping technology on your phone, it can be all too easy to get lost driving across multi stanley cup ple lanes and multiple intersections when youre in a strange city, and even more so abroad. Check out the intersection on Street View first, and you at least know whats coming your way.      2  Travel through walks ahead of time Speaking of checking stanley tumbler  out journeys ahead of time, the walking directions you get from todays mapping apps arent always reflective of the pathways and trails that are actually on the ground. Okay, so youre not going to walk the entire route in Street View鈥攜ou may as well stay at home if youre doing that鈥攂ut you can use it to spy out some turns and key points along the way, to minimize the risk of you getting lost while youre outdoors.  3  Find out if theres parking Youre heading to a restaurant, a bar, or anywhere else, and you need to work out if therell be anywhere to park: Google Maps and Apple Maps can help with this up to a point, and you can probably find informat stanley bottles ion on the venue website as well, but a quick visit to Street View can give you a good idea whether or not youre going to be spending a long time looking for parking  and if there is a parking lot, you can check where the entrance is .  Screenshot: Gizmodo  4  Decide if you want to move to a neighborhood If you Jznb Dubai Plans to DNA Test All 3 Million of Its Residents
 As reported stanley kubek  in March, internal emails show a Facebook employee warned the company about Cambridge Analytica in September 2015, saying it was engaged in some  sketchy  data-harvesting activities. For most of the year, Facebook has fought vigorously in court to prevent that email from being disclosed to the public. For reasons not immediately clear, its attorneys folded this week and agreed to its release.     Facebook class= 82 stanley vaso 21 ize-full wp-image-1851745578 8243; /> Screenshot: Facebook  The District of Columbia fought to make this document public because we believe the American people have a right to know what and when Facebook knew about its data security weaknesses,  said a spokesperson for the office of the attorney gen stanley ca eral for the District of Columbia.  According to the conversations this document contains, Facebook employees were raising alarms about political partners and doubts about their compliance with Facebooks data policies as far back as September 2015.  The attorney general for the District of Columbia, Karl A. Racine, is currently suing Facebook, arguing that its privacy policies during the 2016 election were in direct violation of the Districts Consumer Protection Procedures Act. The office has said in court that nearly half of all D.C. residents were swept up in the Cambridge Analytica incident. In total, the political consultancy inappropriately obtained data on as many as 87 million users of the social network, according to Facebook. Facebook has