Quebec Plans To Require Website Blocking, Studies New Internet Access Tax 237
An anonymous reader writes: Michael Geist reports that the Government of Quebec released its budget (PDF) yesterday featuring two Internet-related measures that are sure to attract attention and possible litigation. First, it is moving forward with plans to study a new tax on residential Internet services in order to provide support for the cultural sector. Second, the government says it will be introducing a new law
requiring ISPs to block access to online gambling sites. The list of blocked sites will be developed by Loto-Quebec, a government agency. The government views this as a revenue enhancing measure because it wants to channel gamblers to its own Espacejeux, the government's own online gaming site.
Cher gouvernement (Score:2, Funny)
Allez chier ma gang d'osti de calisse de lèche-cul de tabarnaks.
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Re: Cher gouvernement (Score:2, Interesting)
Why would you expect two languages separated by an ocean, as well as several centuries (mostly ones where long-distance communication was extremely limited), to still remain similar?
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Because, unlike English, the French language is not defined by use, it is defined by the French Academy. [wikipedia.org]
Re: Cher gouvernement (Score:5, Interesting)
English as spoken in, say, the southern US had its origin in Elizabethan times. But no law has ever prevented the dialect from changing from its original form or required that visitors use a specific set of words and expressions. Meanwhile in France and every other part of Europe, stop signs say STOP. In Montréal, they have to say ARRÊT.
Rude too (Score:3)
In Montréal, they have to say ARRÊT.
Not "ARRÊTEZ"? Isn't that a bit rude? The give way signs in France are "Cédez le passage" not "Céde le passage".
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Their people love their culture and are willing to fight for it. There's nothing wrong with that. As long as I don't have to pay for them to keep their culture going, I don't care what they do.
As for the gambling, that's perfectly normal they would block other gambling sites. I can't believe this hasn't been done everywhere in Canada yet. The US blocked some of the Canadian gambling offerings for the same reason Quebec is looking at doing it.
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The US effectively blocked them by telling the credit card companies and banks not to honor any transactions related to gambling.
Re:Cher gouvernement (Score:5, Insightful)
Allez chier ma gang d'osti de calisse de lèche-cul de tabarnaks.
Christ de modérateur, mon commentaire est 100% on-topic.
Dear Anonymous Coward,
I'm also a Quebecer (and french) and I understand your frustration toward the government (even if I don't share it). But I completely miss the purpose behind the idea of writing a hateful post (not to mention in Quebecer french) about the government in a English and worldwide news website. Did you expect sympathy from this community? Did it make you fell better?
I find this not only useless, it's plain stupid.
Re: Cher gouvernement (Score:3, Funny)
Please rewrite your comment so the French part is conspicuously larger.
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Here, go support Quebec and borrow the book locally:
http://iris.banq.qc.ca/alswww2... [banq.qc.ca]
He thinks Quebec isn't "corrupt", it *IS* corrupt. It's not even a question! I mean it's just written by a police officer with a foreword from the president of Interpol.
Can you name the equivalent of the Commission Charbonneau for Ontario? If the worst they can do in Toronto is Rob Ford, I'll choose that!
http://www.macleans.ca/news/ca... [macleans.ca]
You telling me you can look at your paycheck, your property taxes, all the other taxes i
I hate not being culture (Score:5, Insightful)
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Welcome to the New Puritanism. It's like the old puritanism but without God.
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No this is in reference to Quebec, its exactly like the old puritanism god and all
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Just let the free market decide what we want self sustaining art to be
Not all of the arts are or ever have been self-sustaining. Historically, what you see is sponsorship by the state, the church, or the merchant prince.
Quebec is an island of francophone culture off a continent that is dominated by the U.S. Either you embrace protectionism or risk losing all that makes you unique.
What makes you unique (Score:5, Insightful)
Quebec is an island of francophone culture off a continent that is dominated by the U.S. Either you embrace protectionism or risk losing all that makes you unique.
That is a nonsense argument. If one needs to resort to protectionist measures to "preserve" your culture from a peaceful (to you) neighbor, then your people don't really support said measures even if they claim to. Actions speak louder than words. People claim to hate McDonalds and yet they sell millions of burgers every year to many of those same people. If the people of Quebec really want to speak French or engage in Francophile activities then they will do so. If they don't then they shouldn't be forced to. Cultural norms shift over time and there is nothing fundamentally bad about that.
I spend a fair bit of time in Canada. I was married in Alberta and regularly vacation in Ontario. Canada is a wonderful country. Most of Canada has little difficulty maintaining what makes them unique because what makes them truly unique isn't stuff the government needs to pass laws to protect.
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I don't think most people would disagree with you, but I think it'd be an enormous loss if every country ended up being just like every other country. Tourism exists so that people can experience a different culture and environment for a short while. But if you get to some other location and it's the same language, same restaurants, same shops, same recreational activities, what a waste. I think there's probably a way to get people to take pride in what makes their pocket of humanity different without go
No risk of homogeneity (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't think most people would disagree with you, but I think it'd be an enormous loss if every country ended up being just like every other country.
Never going to happen. Heck there are pretty substantial regional differences even within single countries. Go visit the Louisiana Bayou and then go to NYC and tell me America is homogenous.
But if you get to some other location and it's the same language, same restaurants, same shops, same recreational activities, what a waste.
"Waste"? Not at all. Shared cultural experiences have huge benefits, not the least of which are increased commerce and reduced conflict. It's hard to think of someone as the Other if they look, talk and act like you. Many people very much like familiarity even when in a foreign place. And it doesn't take a lot to feel displaced. Even something like moving from the US to Canada (or vice-versa) results in some pretty significant cultural adjustments even though the two countries are very similar in a lot of ways.
I'm not at all arguing that everyplace should be the same (quite the opposite in fact) but there is nothing wrong with having some, or even a lot of similarity.
In the end, I think a lot of places that want to be Americanized (or whatever you want to call it) will end up so, and then they'll soon come to regret it.
I could say the exact reverse and it has the same potential of being true. There is nothing wrong with adopting bits of a different culture if they appeal to you. The US has adopted cultural practices and language from around the globe. There is no reason why it should be bad for other cultures to take bits of American culture and language they like (or not if they don't). Different merely for the sake of being different is every bit as bad as everyone being the same.
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Increased commerce? Not if everything is produced by Acme corp because no one sees any value in uniqueness. Reduced conflict? That's pitiful. If people hate each other, it's not going to matter if they speak the same language or not. It's probably better that they don't.
Yes, there are pockets of America that maintain an identity of their own, but they're few and far between. Cultures get assimilated and eradicated. It takes decades, but eventually they fade away. I live in an area that had a strong f
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Not all of the arts are or ever have been self-sustaining. Historically, what you see is sponsorship by the state, the church, or the merchant prince.
I consider sponsorship from the church or merchant prince as being self sustaining. The artist found someone willing to pay for their services.
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Either you embrace protectionism or risk losing all that makes you unique.
And nothing of value was lost. Sorry, but I don't see what's so cool about being unique. It's a lot harder to justify going to war with a people who are just like you.
Re:I hate not being culture (Score:4, Informative)
Canada has that sort of system, too, to protect local "culture" from the US marketing behemoth.
When it works, it seems to work pretty well.
The main issue with that sort of system is that it's based on a minimum quantity of local content. Yes, you do get some good local talent which you might not hear about otherwise. Unfortunately, most of the time you just get Nickelback.
I think the majority of Canadians would prefer to just drop the CanCon requirements entirely.
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Don't blame me, I never bought their crap or attended their shows. But yes, when you worship the "Free market", you get low-forehead crap like Nickelback, Britney Spears, Justin Bieber, Honey Boo Boo, The Kardashians, and the various Hollywood trash movies, so we can thank the masses of our fellow citizens for that.
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I would not mind at all paying a reasonable tax in order to support the art, so we see stuff on TV, movies, and the Internet that isn't pre-digested, optimized crap done by market-droids in order to sell us more junk.
One mans trash is another mans treasure.
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That post you just made! That, and all the other comments here, are splendid examples of 21st century culture.
I know that, but the people trying to defend culture see it as the enemy to real culture.
"to provide support for the cultural sector" (Score:5, Informative)
Anytime you hear the word "culture" in Quebec, watch out. It has a much more ominous overtone there than in most of the rest of the world.
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Re:"to provide support for the cultural sector" (Score:5, Informative)
Quebec is an oddity because they have a ton of things that no one else does - they are ... special.
So if you want to hold a contest Canada-wide, you follow basic legislation that applies federally (generally easy) and maybe have to make adjustments for each province (again, easy). But if you want to add QC, you suddenly are beholden to a TON more regulations. Most companies simply choose to avoid it because the benefit of adding QC is very small compared to the burden.
It's also why in Canada you often run into things like "Not for sale in Quebec". Electronic toys are even more fascinating because you often have "Quebec edition" and "Not for Quebec edition" (usually marked as "Not for sale in Quebec").
It's really an independent nation of its own - they just happen to use the Canadian dollar and passport.
Re:"to provide support for the cultural sector" (Score:4, Insightful)
This is why both Canada and the US should be abolished as nations, and new (smaller) nations should be formed in their places. Quebec should be an independent country, the west coast should have its own country, the US northeast should be a country (perhaps combined with Canada's maritime provinces) the US southeast should be a separate country, etc. Then these new countries can form a trade union much like the EU, with a shared currency (maybe) and free trade between them, but still having a huge amount of autonomy so that each region can do its own thing, such as legalizing pot (as the PacNW wants to do), or banning pot and abortion (as the Dixie states want to do).
Re:"to provide support for the cultural sector" (Score:4, Insightful)
What you describe is (mostly) what our federal system of government in the US was supposed to accomplish. Independent states bound together only by common commerce, money, and security. If the federal government hadn't grown to the size/scope it is today, we wouldn't bat an eye when one state enacted a particular law and the next did not.
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BS, this is the exact same thing every libertarian regurgitates and it isn't true. What you're describing is the Articles of Confederation. Those were tossed out in the 1790s in favor of the Constitution, which provides a much stronger central government though still with some federalism. What you describe also isn't feasible at all with all the tiny states we have, some no bigger than Luxembourg (which itself saw the value of union and created a trade union with Belgium and Netherlands, called Benelux,
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What you describe is pretty much the way the US was originally intended to be. The Feds handle standards (like weights and measures) and foreign policy, pretty much everything else handled at the level of the individual States.
Alas, the Feds have been working hard to move every decision to Washington for a long time now, whether it makes sense to do so or not....
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Quebec was also the only place in the world AFAIK that had a tax on tax, they shamelessly added the provincial sales tax on top of the sub-total with the Canadian sales tax...
Even the corrupt, greedy, selfish psychopaths running this banana republic had to agree this was excessive, they changed the formula but adjusted the rate to come out to the same total in the end. But now they can say they no longer tax tax.
This place is so absurd and laughable.
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The main reason some contests are only available in Quebec is that they are special 'Quebec only' versions of contests that already exist in the rest of the country but other provinces didn't require extra hoops to be jumped through and more importantly, extra fees to be paid to get licensed. That is not a good thing since it creates a barrier that a lot of smaller contest holders just won't bother with. Quebec residents usually lose out more than they gain from these extra requirements.
And 99% of the reas
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Stop sending people into Québec to poison the vote then.
I do like how they have their own TLD now, which is more interesting than the taxation and gambling legislation that brought this discussion on.
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If you're not French (and don't like Quebec culture and language), then WTF are you doing living there? That's your own dumb fault for moving to a place you don't like.
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Taxis wont pick you up.
Ok, how exactly does a taxi driver look at you standing on the street and tell that you speak English instead of French? It's not like French people look significantly different from other white people (assuming you're white of course). (If you're not white, that's just plain ol' racism, not discrimination against non-French people. And it's not like all French speakers are white anyway; there's whole countries in Africa full of French speakers, plus lots of African-descent people i
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Rooms go quiet when you enter, people cross the street to avoid meeting you on the sidewalk then cross back after you've passed.
Ok, how do random people on the street tell that you're not a tourist and are there to stay, and more importantly how do they tell you're not a native Quebecoi?
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Not likely. The Millennials will become the Boomers. My generation is X, which has been shit upon by every other generation, most particularly including the Boomers, almost since we came into being. So if the Boomers get shit upon by younger generations, they're simply getting back what they dealt out.
(Gen X will not become as the Boomers because the generation is too small; we don't fit their shoes)
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The US Constitution gives the power to ratify international agreements and make them law to the US Senate alone. The State Dept. and the US President are only able to create temporary agreements with no lasting legal authority. That was the gist of the open letter.
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Anytime you hear the word "culture" in Quebec, watch out. It has a much more ominous overtone there than in most of the rest of the world.
What do you mean by this? Are you referring to their insistence on being more French than the French (eg. Stop signs say 'Arret' in Quebec, but 'Stop' in France), or something else?
Re:"to provide support for the cultural sector" (Score:5, Insightful)
Essentially, yes.
In Quebec they choose to actively suppress English and promote French ... the the extent you can't have English signage unless it's smaller than French, and they've ever tried to get companies like Best Buy and Home Depot to change to French names,
Basically they've been told to piss up a rope by those companies, and that they'd rather leave than to undermine their own existing brands.
Quebec are a bunch of whiny assholes, who increasingly are trying to pass laws which actively discriminate against anybody who isn't white, French, and Catholic -- to the extent that they want to ban religious symbols, unless of course it's a cross, and then it's OK.
That and they don't even realize they're barely capable of speaking in French -- they're illiterate in both offficial languages. I've known people from France who have to speak to people from Quebec in English because Quebecoise is such a mongrel of a language.
They think they're preserving their culture ... when their "culture" is bigotry, a ruined version of the language, and a sense of entitlement mixed in with being whiny cunts.
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That and they don't even realize they're barely capable of speaking in French -- they're illiterate in both offficial languages. I've known people from France who have to speak to people from Quebec in English because Quebecoise is such a mongrel of a language.
To be fair, it's the French language from France that is becoming a mongrel of a language.
I've never been to Québec, but aside from their annoying accent, the French-speaking people from Québec I've met seem to be using really old French.
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In Quebec they choose to actively suppress English and promote French ... the the extent you can't have English signage unless it's smaller than French, and they've ever tried to get companies like Best Buy and Home Depot to change to French names,
Most of us anglo-Quebecers are actually at ease with the fact that French is the dominant language and we need to adapt ourselves to it. I just consider a matter of common courtesy and politeness to make an effort to communicate with your neighbour. Sure, we will whine about the ridiculousness of the language police at times, but not many people argue wi
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Please tell me more. Not about the idiots, I know about those, but what you did to leave, what you work in, are you on quitterlequebec.com?
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Indeed. It's the equivalent of "Will somebody think of the children" but with "culture" and "language" instead.
It's one thing to try and protect the french language in Québec but it's another to shit on everyone's head (both unilingual and bilingual).
It seems some politicians still don't understand what the Internet is or they're even dumber than we thought.
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Anytime you hear the word "culture" in Quebec, watch out. It has a much more ominous overtone there than in most of the rest of the world.
Just ask anyone who got stuck with a 'Canadian Multilingual Standard' keyboard layout...
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Just ignore the keyboard labels, configure it as english keyboard and you're done. I did that for 4 years with a Samsung QX410 with that same keyboard layout. OTOH, the XPS13 is an awesome machine, so I'd recommend that over anything else anyway.
When I hear the word "Culture" ... (Score:2)
When I hear the word "Culture"..... that's when I reach for my revolver. Original quote "Wenn ich Kultur höre ... entsichere ich meinen Browning!"
Obligatory Godwin, but sometimes they got it right.
Provide support for the cultural sector (Score:2, Insightful)
So the tax is to "support the movie, music, and book publishing industries."
Shouldn't those "industries" be funded by investors, who get a return from sales?
Or is this about propping up movies, music, and books no one wants to buy?
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Well, art is different from many goods in that no one knows if anyone will want it until it's created. It's a high-risk high-failure business model. And the government reducing the risk has been showed to pay net dividends to society.
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Well, art is different from many goods in that no one knows if anyone will want it until it's created. It's a high-risk high-failure business model.
The lack of certainty about demand isn't limited to art. *cough* Zune *cough*. Or the reverse case, IBM estimating that their Entry Systems Department (PCs) if they were lucky might sell up to 100,000 units.
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So the tax is to "support the movie, music, and book publishing industries."
My question is, will this be limited to french only movies, music and books? There's still a large contingent of english here.
Dangerous Precedent (Score:5, Insightful)
This sets a dangerous precedent that it is perfectly okay for the government to block websites in order to generate more revenue. If this passes, expect states in the US to try the same thing, especially if they have casinos that aren't doing well.
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This sets a dangerous precedent that it is perfectly okay for the government to block websites in order to generate more revenue. If this passes, expect states in the US to try the same thing, especially if they have casinos that aren't doing well.
That would almost make sense, except Quebec, like Louisiana, has a legal system based / influenced on French civil law, rather than the more common (in US and Canada) English common law heritage.
That said, state and provincial governments are facing deficits and short-falls, so anything that promises increased revenue would certainly catch their attention.
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Did you miss how the US does block international internet casinos in direct opposition to their WIPO obligations? Did you miss how some tiny island nations notable for their internet gambling can now consume all US IP for nothing and legally (at least to WIPO treaties)?
This was years ago now, but the US has long ago jumped down that hole.
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No precedent to set (Score:2)
If this passes, expect states in the US to try the same thing, especially if they have casinos that aren't doing well.
States in the US have had a hypocritical fight against gambling going on for years. Plenty of states have prohibited and restricted gambling in one form or another for most of my life. It's a fairly recent development that casinos have been permitted outside of Nevada, New Jersey and Indian Reservations because the state wanted the gambling revenue for the state lotteries. It's been an uphill battle to allow casinos and other forms of gambling in most states until fairly recently. And now the brink and
Tax Bullshit (Score:5, Insightful)
If culture sees a single cent of that tax, I'll be impressed. This is strictly a way of balancing their budget without raising the tax rates, which would've caused furor. This internet tax sailed past all major news organizations as far as I can tell.
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With you on that. This province is getting more surreal and absurd by the minute, and judging by the rightful student protests, it's not just old-man grumpiness talking here.
Tax on stupidity (Score:2)
I'm all for taxes on people who do not understand math. They should help lower taxes for those who do.
The best thing to ever come out of Quebec... (Score:2, Funny)
is the Trans Canada , heading West...
Government Greed (Score:2)
The only thing's that are infinite are Government Greed and Human Stupidity.
Time to leave (Score:2)
I've been disappointed with Montreal and Quebec in general for a long time but always fell back on the cop-out "it's not better elsewhere" loser mentality.
It is better elsewhere. But where do they still hire PCB designers?
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Absolutely untrue. I've been told many times I'm the best PCB designer engineers have worked with, and I do know the biggest tool in the industry, Cadence. Now that the economy is crashed, everyone wants Altium experience.
The reality is that I'm a stubborn and very naive person, I persisted in doing PCB design even though I know that Montreal is dead and finished in high tech. Or in *that* kind of high tech. There's an abundance of startups working on increasingly baffling (to me) products that obviously ha
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"Oh but we see a gray hair, and you don't know the ARM architecture? What's this? Cadence? Buh bye!"
So why not learn ARM and Altium ? There's plenty of work to do, but you have to be willing to adjust.
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Because I don't have a bachelor's degree. I could learn to make an ARM from sand I find on the street and HR will just send my CV to /dev/nul and that's the end of that.
And please explain how I will learn Altium when I'm unemployed and can't download the legal eval copy?
Plus Altium sucks. To me it almost guarantees the kind of employer who thinks 35 parts on a board and 4 layers is on the same level as solving nuclear fusion power.
Look. This is the kind of complexity I've tackled.
http://tinypic.com/r/detlat [tinypic.com]
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Over 50. You might as well shoot yourself in the head at my age. I tried already to go back to university, you think I enjoy being surrounded by women I can never touch and little pipsqueaks with no knowledge?
I tried Concordia, got accepted no problem in their EE program. I had to re-do basic chemistry, which was fine because most people in that chem class were young women in nursing. For some reason, the hottest woman there teamed up with me. Like, crazy hot. Like, movie hot. That never happened to me befo
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Because electrical engineering is a shrinking profession ? You can't see that? There is nothing left to *do* in electrical engineering, but everywhere else you look in Montreal it's just lawyers and notaries and accountants and MBAs blowing each other to manage this or that.
I think I need to sit down with you and explain a few things to you. You're headed for trouble with your naive tech-only worldview. It *will* explode in your face like a grenade launched by a fat Quebecois pig into an 18 year old's face.
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Oh, so I have to be super-confident and positive to apply for jobs, but if I repeat what others tell me, I have a humility problem? *I* don't think I'm that good, I'm just repeating what I've been told.
I'm sorry, so should I keep that to myself in an interview and just say well, *I* think I'm not that good?
Learn to read what is written instead of projecting your own horrid personality onto other people.
" greatly similar to the one you know already?"
OK, you're clueless. They couldn't be more different if Cad
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"No, I know both program and I've done multi-layer and high speed. Granted, faster I've make is about 300MHz on 4 layer b"
So, DC on hobby boards. This is the sign of a healthy tech sector in Montreal?
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So with all due respect, you know maybe 10% of Altium and 5% of Allegro, and 0% of the PCB design landscape as a profession.
So much for humility. All your claims about the programs being similar are garbage.
And "robotics" is probably a fancy word for "I assemble PLCs to put labels on lipstick containers and use ladder diagrams to adjust the timing of label maker". Come on, there's no "robotics" in Quebec. Lots of silliness, but no real companies, no real products. There used to be EMS in Ste Anne that worke
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For sure, there's nothing special about the day care rates here if in any case you're being robbed from all sides with school tax, welcome tax, income tax, etc...
Sorry, you can't do that (Score:2)
I don't believe Quebec has the power to regulate ISPs. AFAIK, telecommunication regulations are the domain of the federal government.
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Taxation, perhaps they could get away with. I was actually referring more the the "blocking gambling sites" part of the article. I suppose I should have been more clear.
I'm always amused... (Score:2)
I don't even understand why that is, which is probably the weirdest part.
Some Quebec Gambling Background From Ontario (Score:3)
This isn't as anti-gambling or even as anti-competition as it sounds. Quebec's gambling laws have always been very different from the rest of Canada, in a very interesting way.
For example, in Ontario, gambling is really for lotteries and contests and casinos and that's about it. Everything else is illegal -- just like you can't buy alcohol in a grocery store, you can't gamble in a bar.
In Quebec, however, there are slot machines (fun ones) in bars all the time. Gambling is available everywhere -- especially where alcohol is. It's governed and licensed and available.
Two very different ways of controlling gambling, in a country where gambling is seen as an addictive activity to be controlled. Quebec's not wrong in wanting to control on-line gambling -- it's totally consistent with their gaming laws.
And, most of all, I promise that no one in Quebec is at a loss for opportunities to gamble. They are everywhere.
we want to protect you from your gambling (Score:2)
Brought to you by the guys that sold you scratch tickets in exchange for your welfare checque.
People's Republic of Quebec (Score:2)
I wonder if any of Quebec's "legislators" (applying the term very loosely) know what a VPN is?
Quebec's gamblers soon will.
How to enforce? How to enforce?...
What a marvellous idea: following in China's footsteps.
Here comes the Great Firewall of Quebec.
Statist thugs, that's all they are.
Blocking gambling sites (Score:4, Interesting)
I'm not even certain it's a good thing for Loto-Quebec since it would open the door to other provinces and countries blocking access to Quebec gambling sites. Who knows where this could end up? Once you start blocking one group of sites, you could start blocking other groups too.
In the end, I don't think it will be seen as legal. Someone will surely challenge this all the way to the supreme court.
I find this more troubling (Score:3)
"The government views this as a revenue enhancing measure because it wants to channel gamblers to its own Espacejeux, the government's own online gaming site."
Usually the blocking of sites is for morality issues, but Quebec is seeing this as a revenue measure. Much like the provisions against bringing in your own water bottle to a concert, so you can buy their more expensive one.
Communism is redistribution of wealth, or at least apportionment of resources (can be like old USSR, or like Star Trek if you've got machines to materialize anything you can want -- resources are no longer limited).
Fascism is a government that runs for the purpose of businesses and eventually, picks a winner (like 1940's Italy and Germany, and arguably Japan today, and America is getting close).
But what is it when the government BECOMES the company? Don't government's know they can just PRINT MONEY? SEE; Real World economics explained below.
Instead of a lottery/gambling;
Form your own bank, create bonds for local infrastructure, and pay 10% per diem with tax breaks to investors and meanwhile you can put people to work creating things that will enhance business and the community. You get more money back from the wages.
Gambling is a pernicious social problem, and these scratch-card financed governments can only capture revenue from other locations and their own citizens, who will be less productive and lose a work ethic for their "get rich quick" gambling ethic. It's a way to raise taxes on the people who usually have the least education, judgement and income. In short; it's robbing Peter to pay Paul, but doing it with Pay-Day loans and Paul is going to be a useless wife-beater wearing fool who insists everyone around him write their Le Menu in French.
*In the USA we have a fractional reserve banking system. Bonds are created to be offset by dollars created and the bonds are investments the government can sell. So money is created by debt. The Money just gets shipped to banks. Why doesn't the government be the bank, you may ask, since it's both the real lender and the one taking the risk (holding and paying off the bond) - and wow, Iceland just did it and it seems to have worked fine in the past in the USA. Great question, which will get you kicked out of economics class if you ask it again. but that's because it was necessary to pay off the rich people in charge at the time during the Civil War -- I'm sure people have learned interesting and convoluted economical explanations for why our Federal Reserve banking system is yadda yadda, but they can't explain how the system doesn't collapse if you pay off all the debts that created money in the first place (because of factoring, banks can loan $10 or more dollars for each on deposit - but leverage works both ways see; Nov. 2008) -- oh, and let's not notice that the #1 Investor is offshore banks. Anyone know if we don't just manufacture money to buy our own money? But I digress, all is well and go back to whatever and just know; governments don't need to tax -- EXCEPT to engage the citizens, and to redistribute wealth (some other fools think it's because they can't pay for things otherwise and stuff about who DESERVES what they earned -- as if most wages weren't decisions made by those who valued themselves higher), and it's a way to value their currency -- you have to back a currency with the ability to pay it back if you don't have nuclear weapons (OK, someone really needs to explain to the average person how currencies are valued; military power, and/or arbitrary decision of World Banker and his last bootie call -- you are welcome).
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If you don't know Quebec, it's what Bohemia would be like if it were actually populated by Bohemians.
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Aerospace? You mean like CAE that is a depressing, miserable place to work for? Hydro? You mean a technology that can't be exported just anywhere? Videogames? This is your idea of an economy? A bunch of kids drawing pictures so other kids can spend their days in front of monitors? Fuck me! If you're 40 and still give a shit about video games you need a life re-appraisal.
And no other province can do that? They sure can, without the continuous background of corruption and high taxes.
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I guess Quebec bashing from the rest of the country is to be expected in news like those.
Well like it or now, Quebec bring a shit lot of stuff and specialization for Canada that isn't to look down (aerospace, hydroelectricity and videogame to name a few). Furthermore, I don't know in what world you live but I don't see how speaking a different language is in any way related in actual capabilities or skill.
Humm, let's see. Hydro Quebec gets 80% of it's current revenu from Quebecers and constantly demanding increases of 4 to 5% per years while making record profits. So while it makes a lot of money, it's not doing it from what it sells to the US because it has to sell there at a lost and subsidize to companies who threaten to leave the province.
Aerospace? Bombardier is cuttings a lot of jobs of late because of poor decisions and I got a friend working there who is currently quite nervous of loosing his pos
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And now, thanks to "net neutrality" regulations, these kinds of taxes can be imposed on the U.S. with mere regulation changes.
Start by blocking loto-quebec.com (Score:3)
Start by blocking loto-quebec.com because lotteries are gambling, right?
They'll change their tune damn fast...
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And for those who don't know much about Quebec, I am being sarcastic. Quebec needs to stop putting itself into deficit year after year before it gets to a point where we get imposed stuff like they are doing in Greece because I promise you, there isn't a politician alive here with the backbone to refuse to pay the creditors and put it's population 1st.
Disclaimer: I live here too.
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It's not just Québec. New Hampshire controls all liquor sales within the state. You can buy beer and wine anywhere, but everything else is at the state stores. The lotteries are also state run.
Just like this story, the US has talked about Internet taxes countless times and the US certainly tries to block or limit gambling to government controlled entities. I'm sure every country has either discussed or acted on both to some extent.
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Quebec, the province, or Quebec, the city? Because what you're describing is more of a Quebec city thing!