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 The Guardian reports that o stanley taza fficials in B茅ziers will create a database of genetic data from dogs using swabs of their saliva taken by veterinarians. That info will then be used to create a genetic passport for each dog that the police can use to match an owner to the fecal matter they left behind on the sidewalk. Anyone found guilty of not cleaning up after their dog will face a fine of 鈧?22, currently about $137, and those caught without a genetic passport will be fined 鈧?8, or roughly $43. The trial only affects B茅ziers at the behest of Mayor Robert M茅nard, and its currently planned to only run for two years until July 2025.      We did a count and we pick up more than 1,000 messes a month, sometimes a lot more, just in the town centre. It just cannot go on,  M茅nard said to France Bleu radio, as quoted by The stanley becher  Guardian.  There w stanley mug ill be a certain lenience for those who are not from B茅ziers. If they pick up their dog dirt we wont bother them. Were not xenophobes. Foreigners arent the problem, its the locals who are not cleaning up.  According to the outlet, M茅nard proposed a similar scheme in 2016, but it was shut down by a local court as they believed it was an attack on personal freedom. M茅nard submitted the idea to the local government again, and it passed without any objections. Meanwhile in the U.S., luxury apartment complexes have been requiring this same responsibility from residents for several years, with companies like PooPrints offering doggy DNA testing as a privatiz Quff The Bad Batch   s Producers Break Down Season 3   s Fascinating Female Characters
 developed by the company. And Pyongyangs admiration for Cupertino apparently goes much deeper鈥攁nd darker. New details from the peninsula suggest that Kim Jong Uns regime is taking cues from Apple in building security features to surveil and suppress the North Korean people. Specifically, the  Red  stanley water bottle Star  operating system used on North Korean computers and cellphones comes with software that prevents users from installing unauthorized apps. According to the Associated  stanley cup Press, experts say the idea came straight from Apple:     Outside experts believe a program similar to what Apple uses in its OS X and iOS is believed to be the basis of the booby-trap that thwarts attempts to disable security functions in Red Star. Its now a staple on North Korean phones. And by 2014, all mobile phone operating systems had been updated to include the watermarking system to reject apps or media that dont carry a government signature of approval. Its the same mechanism used by Apple to block unauthorized applications from the App Store, but in North Koreas case serves instead to control access to information. With Steve Jobss reputation as  an authoritarian in mind, the idea that a dictator would use strategies similar to Apples  walled garden  in order to censor information seems oddly appropriate. Of course, one could argue  stanley flask that Apple uses this type of blocking software to keep malware and broken apps off of peoples phones, and thats a good thing. The North Korean regime uses the technology as a f