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" ... According to the narrow logic of the proposed legislation, a breach of any of the above information will not result in financial damage, which is the reason it isn’t covered. It’s a position easily brushed aside with one mind-blowing word of refutation: Extortion. Scam artists have countless tricks up their sleeves, and the onus to anticipate the adaptive nature of crime falls on legislators. A single text or rented video could potentially ruin a person’s life, and fraudsters know that. If the wrong person has access to the above data points—and any of those bytes contain information that might harm you professionally or personally—they most certainly could be used against you for financial gain. ... "
" ... But is this not so much a refutation as a simple restatement of the Western universalism that Huntington finds to be false, immoral and dangerous? ... "
" ... Foreign Affairs spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said the “letters have been prepared for the editors of FT and NYT demanding a refutation of the published misinformation...and will be handed to the chief editors through our embassies in the USA and Britain today,” she said. ... "
" ... It is usually those identified as conservatives who point to the importance of g by race, those usually identified as on the left who point to the far greater in group variation as refutation. So I'm slightly puzzled by why this in group variation argument hasn't been trotted out here. ... "
" ... Pseudosciences are usually pretty easily identified by their emphasis on confirmation over refutation, on physically impossible claims, and on terms charged with emotion or false "sciencey-ness," which is kind of like "truthiness" minus Stephen Colbert. Sometimes, what peddlers of pseudoscience say may have a kernel of real truth that makes it seem plausible. But even that kernel is typically at most a half truth, and often, it's that other half they're leaving out that makes what they're selling pointless and ineffectual. But some are just nonsense out of the gate. I'd love to have some magic cream that would melt away fat or make wrinkles disappear, but how likely is it that such a thing would be available only via late-night commercials? ... "