Ringlovo
Ringlovo t1_j15qbpv wrote
Reply to comment by jschubart in Court ruling: High earners can't prevent media accessing their tax data. by FINCoffeeDaddy
Except some information is directly tied to very private information, such as housing, disability, etc.
Ringlovo t1_j15q6yw wrote
Reply to comment by PenguinSunday in Court ruling: High earners can't prevent media accessing their tax data. by FINCoffeeDaddy
Facebook and Twitter are private companies. If you think you are being tracked by them, you can stop using them.
Ringlovo t1_j158z1m wrote
Reply to comment by Tweetydabirdie in Court ruling: High earners can't prevent media accessing their tax data. by FINCoffeeDaddy
In America we have the right to privacy. What you make, donate to charity, pay in taxes, how many deductions you apply for, is - frankly - no one's business but you and the government.
Ringlovo t1_j14sply wrote
Reply to comment by Motobugs in Court ruling: High earners can't prevent media accessing their tax data. by FINCoffeeDaddy
This news is from Finland, but as an American, I absolutely agree.
No one - rich, poor, or otherwise - should have thier tax returns be made publicly accessible.
Ringlovo t1_iui9vue wrote
Reply to comment by GooseEntrails in Got this piece of Toy Story Film Strip for my birthday yesterday by RareSun_
Absolutely. Not impossible, but very hard.
But those fans also didn't chop up the film into small pieces and sell it on etsy. So I think that leads more credence that it's from a common item - like a trailer - as opposed to an actual full film
Ringlovo t1_iugnveg wrote
Reply to comment by RareSun_ in Got this piece of Toy Story Film Strip for my birthday yesterday by RareSun_
More than anything, it's how very strictly controlled the prints for these films were, and how exceedingly rare it would be for reel of this film to wind up in private collection, much less how unlikely for the owner to dice it up.
Ringlovo t1_iugn0mt wrote
I wouldn't be surprised if this is from a trailer reel.
The films themselves were pretty well controlled by the studio. Very unlikely an individual would end up with one.
It could be cut out of a film if the film broke, and it had to be spliced back together, and someone took the scraps home. (I ended up with a decent chunk of a 35mm print of Batman Begins somewhere in my basement this way).
But the trailers the studio sent out - those were disposable and either collected dust or thrown out. Would be no big deal for an employee to take a bunch home.
Still a very cool find
Edit: yup. The scene posted on another comment is found in the trailer: https://youtu.be/v-PjgYDrg70
Ringlovo t1_j15qkbi wrote
Reply to comment by jschubart in Court ruling: High earners can't prevent media accessing their tax data. by FINCoffeeDaddy
If you'd like to make your tax returns public, you're free to do so. Open yourself up to public scrutiny if you'd like. For the rest of us, no thanks.