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Now, let’s say that, during a proposed budget review, you notice that the board has cut funding for a top-rated yearly educational program with your constituents. The report gives that board member empirical evidence that that proposed growth would likely be unattainable. This also works in the inverse.
Companies Are Matching Employee Donations At Higher Ratios. They offer a generous 2:1 match ratio and will match donations up to $10,000 per employee per year. With long-term partnerships, companies will be more receptive to continued funding proposals. Take Coca-Cola for example.
Companies Are Matching Employee Donations At Higher Ratios. They offer a generous 2:1 match ratio and will match donations up to $10,000 per employee per year. With long-term partnerships, companies will be more receptive to continued funding proposals. Take Coca-Cola for example.
During a certain period of time or up to a certain amount, your sponsor will match every donation made, usually at a one-to-one ratio. With a read-a-thon , your students can set up personal fundraising pages and ask for donations and pledges from their networks based on how many books they’ll read. Spirit wear sale. Grocery drop-off.
Unsurprisingly, Amazon’s proposed legislation would ensure that only the party that sets the price — like, say, a bad third-party Amazon retailer — be held liable for the inflated price, not the storefront (i.e. And if it succeeds, the new normal will look a lot like the old one. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) and Rep. Makena Kelly / The Verge ).
ByteDance is reportedly considering all manner of proposed solutions to keep TikTok alive around the world — it’s expected to generate $500 million in revenue this year , after all. billion bid for Fitbit by pledging not to use Fitbit’s health data to help it target ads, people familiar with the matter said.” (Foo
However, the changes to Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act proposed by Hawley do not appear to place any new restrictions on how companies define their own moderation policies—only that they stick to, and evenly apply, whatever rules they ultimately decide upon. (Any tweets, comments, posts, etc.)
The US Department of Justice submitted a proposal to weaken Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act. The proposal would remove immunity for tech platforms’ hosting material related to terrorism, child sex abuse, or cyber-stalking. Chinese state media is blasting Oracle’s proposed deal with TikTok.
I particularly liked this proposed question, about Amazon: In a five-week period during the pandemic, your firm added the value of the world’s largest firm by revenue — Walmart. Regulators are asking the company to pledge that it won’t use Fitbit data to “further enhance its search advantage.” But they may be a start.
Or even what ever happened to Trump’s 2019 pledge to investigate Google for “treason” (?!). The FCC has received hundreds of complaints related to the Keep Americans Connected Pledge, the agency’s primary response to the pandemic. Or why the government was relying on tech giants for so much of its pandemic response at all.
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