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FAQs
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What are the applications of a digital signature?
AuthenticationAlthough messages may often include information about the entity sending a message, that information may not be accurate. Digital signatures can be used to authenticate the source of messages. When ownership of a digital signature secret key is bound to a specific user, a valid signature shows that the message was sent by that user. The importance of high confidence in sender authenticity is especially obvious in a financial context. For example, suppose a bank's branch office sends instructions to the central office requesting a change in the balance of an account. If the central office is not convinced that such a message is truly sent from an authorized source, acting on such a request could be a grave mistake.IntegrityIn many scenarios, the sender and receiver of a message may have a need for confidence that the message has not been altered during transmission. Although encryption hides the contents of a message, it may be possible to change an encrypted message without understanding it. (Some encryption algorithms, known as nonmalleable ones, prevent this, but others do not.) However, if a message is digitally signed, any change in the message after signature invalidates the signature. Furthermore, there is no efficient way to modify a message and its signature to produce a new message with a valid signature, because this is still considered to be computationally infeasible by most cryptographic hash functions (see collision resistance).Non-repudiationNon-repudiation, or more specifically non-repudiation of origin, is an important aspect of digital signatures. By this property, an entity that has signed some information cannot at a later time deny having signed it. Similarly, access to the public key only does not enable a fraudulent party to fake a valid signature.
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What are some of the best things that become legal when you turn 16?
What if I told you that at 16, you are legally old enough to fly an airplane by yourself!That’s right, in the U.S. at 16 you can solo (i.e., fly by yourself with no one else aboard to help you out) in a powered aircraft (as opposed to a glider or a balloon). Federal Aviation Regulation 14 CFR 61.83 permits someone of 16 years of age to hold a Student Pilot Certificate, which enables them to take lessons from a Certified Flight Instructor in powered aircraft. Take enough lessons (e.g. took me about 15 lessons) to become proficient in takeoffs and landings, and the Instructor will “sign you off”, in other words endorse your logbook (like the one the person in the picture is holding) with his/her mighty signature; giving you permission to “fly the pattern” (i.e., takeoff, circle the airport and land) Alone in the airplane (first time is called “soloing”).More training (e.g. took me about 5–6 lessons) to learn navigation and you will be signed off to conduct “cross-country” flights, which are flights you conduct by yourself to airports at least 25 nautical miles distant from your point of departure.Still with it two years later? Accumulate a total of 40 hours flying time practicing; and when you signNow 18, you can be signed off to take the flight test with an FAA Designated Examiner to earn your Private Pilot’s License, which allows you to carry passengers.Interested? Here’s a free e-book by a Certified Flight Instructor and good friend, Max Trescott: Learn to FlyHere’s some more resources for you:Experimental Aircraft Assn (EAA) Young Eagles[1]Aircraft Owners and Pilot’s Assn (AOPA)[2]ETA: Here is yours truly at 18 years old, captured (on film!) in the little rear view mirror; somewhere over Ohio at 2500′ in a Cessna 150, circa 1978:Good luck and Keep Your Airspeed up!Footnotes[1] EAA Young Eagles Program | EAA[2] http://www.aopa.org
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How do I register a startup in India? How much money and time does it take? If am currently only 17, what issues will I face dur
Algorithm for starting a Private Limited Company: Engineer's View Personally I believe, If someone is starting a company with long term perspective or to bring some change through their unique Product/Services, one must go for Private limited firm. Prime reason for this is easy to raise funds from Angels/VC in case you go for investment. Step 1. Registration of Company 1. Name Selection: Check whether your desired company name is available or not at MCA website [ http://www.mca.gov.in/ ]. Name must be unique & must resemble with business you intend to do (highlighted one). EX: Arihant Labs Retail Services Pvt. Ltd 2. Registration of Name at ROC: Name approval usually takes maximum of 14 days. This is done online through MCA website. Moreover, you need to apply with at least 4 names for approval with a writeup about significance of names with main business of the company. 3. 1. Documents Required: 2. 1. Options for names for the proposed Company (on the basis of preference) 2. Amount of Share Capital; proposed shareholding ratio 3. A paragraph on the proposed major line of business of the company (main objects) 4. City of Registered Office. 5. Copy of ownership deed/sale deed(if property is owned) 6. Copy of rent agreement with NOC (if property is rented) 7. Copy of latest electricity bill/telephone bill/mobile bill for both directors 8. Copy of latest electric bill/telephone bill for the registered office proof. 4. Obtaining DIN & DSC: 5. 1. Documents Required 2. 1. PAN Card copies for directors and shareholders. 2. Voter ID/Passport/Driving License for directors and shareholders. 3. Occupation of the Directors for directors and shareholders. 4. E-Mail IDs of all directors and shareholders. 5. Phone Numbers for all directors and shareholders. 6. Photos for directors and shareholders 6. Company Incorporation: After above mentioned formalities have been completed, we need to file following forms/docs in Rs 100 stamp paper: 7. 1. Affidavits for non- acceptance 2. INC 9, INC 10 3. DIR 2 4. NOC : This is required to be filed by the owner of the property on which your company will be situated. 5. Subscriber Sheets of MOA & AOA 6. Documents required for filling MOA & AOA 7. 1. Must be filled on OWN handwriting 2. Passport size photos 3. Sheets needs to be witnessed by CA/CS/Advocate Step 2. Obtaining PAN/TAN: After company gets incorporated, you may apply for PAN/TAN. Step 3. Trade Licence in case you are selling PRODUCTS: This is required in some places for carrying out sales. You can obtain this from local Municipality. Step 4. VAT/CST registration for selling Products: For selling intra-state, you need VAT registration & for selling inter-state, you need to register for CST. 1. Documents Required: 2. 1. Trade Licence 2. Company Incorporation Certificate 3. PAN card of company as well as of all the directors 4. Proof of residence of Directors 5. Proof of occupancy of place of business (Rent agreement/ ownership deed, Rent Bills etc) 6. MOA & AOA of company 7. Current Account in the name of company in any national bank Step 5. Service tax registration for Service Industry: In India, you need to pay service tax of 14.5% on every services you have charged customer for. 1. Documents Required: 2. 1. Company Incorporation Certificate 2. PAN card of company as well as of all the directors 3. Proof of residence of Directors 4. Proof of occupancy of place of business (Rent agreement/ ownership deed, Rent Bills etc) 5. MOA & AOA of company 6. Current Account in the name of company in any national bank That's All folks! Your STARTUP is up to Conquer the World. UPVOTE & SHARE your views/issues We at labkafe [ http://labkafe.com/ ], prefer taxmantra [ http://taxmantra.com/ ] for our legal requirements.
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Legal professionals, what is your best example of showing that a witness was lying whilst giving their testimony?
The best way still to show that a witness or Accused (“defendant” in some jurisdictions) is lying, is to point them and the court to self contradictions in their testimony, or to give clear evidence by another party or source that rebuts the witness's or Accused's evidence.As an example; a few years ago I prosecuted an Accused who essentially forcefully hijacked the business of the complainants. In the process he committed certain offences such as theft and fraud, amongst others. His defence was that he was not the main actor, he was just taking instructions from his partner who he claimed ...
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How do you spend your free time when on a submarine?
As the other replies show, free time on a sub is a rare commodity, especially when you’re at sea. Even before you report on board your first sub as a non non-qualified crew member (a nub, a free air breathing, sanitary tank filling, delinquent puke), you’ve spent the prior 15 months or so going through nuclear power training, sub school, and, plus for enlisted crew members all the various schools for your specialty rating.The sub crew and the Navy want you to get to work and contribute. Your first and most important job is to get started on your watch station and submarine qualifications. When you’re not on watch under instruction, doing admin and record paperwork, studying and practicing for your qualifications, observing maintenance, attending continuing training, engineering and ship’s casualty drills, etc., you just don’t have that much free time at sea on in port. You do have a bit more free time in port since there are no, round the clock watches, only the duty watch. At sea, free time, when you have some, is when you sleep. You may be able to squeeze in a movie (flick) or a game of cards here and there.It can take 1–1/2 to 2 years complete your qualifications, including the coveted dolphins that tells the rest of the world you are qualified in subs. For an officer, being submarine warfare qualified is a major career step. If you don’t earn it, it is a career killer. This is also true for the enlisted crew members, if you want to stay in subs. The process is grueling and requires detailed knowledge of just about everything to do with the sub you are on. This is necessary as each person literally holds the lives of their shipmates in their hands. You have to know how to respond and what your responsibilities are to save your sub and each others lives in an emergency.Even after you have completed your on board qualifications, there is no rest from learning and qualification, plus greater responsibilities are placed on you. Some are in the form of collateral duties. Some are for readying yourself for career advancement. For a nuclear sub officer, that means qualifying as an Engineering Officer (Prospective Nuclear Engineering Officer school with exams, interviews at headquarters (NAVSEA-08) that all have to be passed to be qualified for your next career step). If you make a career of it, there is much more of this ahead of you, and much greater responsibility every step of the way, and it’s not for everyone.
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How often do lawyers lie in court?
Let’s start with the definition of a lie: everyone’s going to have a slightly different standard, but in my mind, someone lies when they make a statement that they know is untrue. So if, for example, someone asks me “Ty, how many kids do you have?” and I say 4 (I only have 2), I’m obviously lying. If someone asks me “where is your son right now?” and I answer that he’s at his preschool because that’s where he usually is at this time of day, I’m not lying if it later turns out, unbeknownst to me, that my wife didn’t take him to school because he was sick. I was definitely incorrect, and perhaps guilty of answering a question without being certain of the answer, but I didn’t lie.So to the question, “how often do lawyers lie in court?” The answer is not that often. It is true that there are some habitual liars in the legal profession. In my 11-year career—which has covered hundreds of disputes—I can distinctly recall 3 lawyers who lied as easily as they breathed. This wasn't just mild fibs or even stretching the truth: they claimed people made statements different from the record, they claimed case law stood for propositions that were 180 degrees different than the actual holdings, etc. And it wasn’t just a one-time desperate attempt to get around a difficult point, either: every hearing, and every pleading, was a game of “count the lies.” All three also had the amazing ability to continue repeating their lies even after the truth had been made apparent to everyone in the courtroom: one lawyer got up and repeated a claim his own witness disavowed just 10 minutes earlier! Unsurprisingly, these lawyers have bad reputations within the legal community. They have few friends in an industry where friends matter quite a bit. But they are also outliers.Most of my opponents are people that I’d characterize as honest (people I’d vouch for without hesitation) or reasonably honest, i.e., people who might tell me a tall tale to try to get out of a scheduled hearing or deposition, but who would never alter evidence or intentionally misstate the holding in a case. If I make an oral agreement with such lawyers, I can trust that it will be honored. On the other end of the scale, there are also some lawyers, who, whether due to dishonesty or bad memories, require everything to be put in writing. I’d say those lawyers are slippery, but I can usually work with them. And there are definitely lawyers out there who oversell: they are willing to make broad, black-and-white statements about a case, but often have to walk them back over time as an opponent chips away at their absolute certainty. A classic example would be “your Honor, if you look at the Smith case, you’ll see it says X” or “ladies and gentlemen of the jury, Mr. Jones will tell you Y.” If the lawyer is not absolutely confident in those facts, he or she has no business making such statements. But still, oversellers never seem to learn their lesson. This is a poor strategy, as once a lawyer loses his or her reputation in a case, it’s not coming back; losing your reputation because you oversold a few pieces of evidence just doesn’t make a lot of sense. Most of these lawyers aren’t liars per se; rather, they are lazy or not particularly good.Most of us work in shades of gray. Let’s say, for example, that there are 3 cases that support an argument I want to make, but 1 that doesn’t. I have to be honest and point out the existence of the bad case to the court, but I still get to argue why the 3 cases I like are more compelling than the 1 case I don’t. My opponent will argue that the case I hate is the best, most well-reasoned case ever written, and that the 3 cases I rely upon don’t hold up. Non-lawyers often view this as lying (How can the other guy try to write these three great cases out of existence? Why don't they just accept the superiority of our arguments?), but both of us are doing our jobs: we’re using the tools at our disposal to make the best possible arguments on behalf of our clients.
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What singer would you say had a tragic death and why?
Karen Carpenter (1950 - 1983)One half of the Carpenters duo, Karen Carpenter sang hits such as: Close to you, Top of the world, Yesterday once more and We’ve only just begun; she tragically died of heart failure, bought on by anorexia, at only 32.Pictured below, Karen Carpenter in 1974.Just three years later in 1977, weighing only 40 kg (90 pounds).Karen Carpenter, had a beautiful three-octave voice, and was also quite competent on the drums.During high school, she was around 67 kg (147 pounds), not fat, but just a little chubby. She eventually settled at around 58 kg (128 pounds).Her problems started in 1973, when she saw an unflattering photo of herself. She vowed to lose the extra weight. Quickly losing 9 kgs (20 pounds) through exercise, she commented that she was aiming for 105 pounds (47 kgs).It was at this time that others began noticing problems too:She would often try to offload the food on her plate to others by saying how delicious the food was and offering it to others to try.She began layering clothing to hide her slimness.She began displaying a tremendous lack of energy between shows, often lying down, only to be back on her feet singing the next minute.All this caught up with her in 1975, when they cancelled a whole European tour due to her failing health. She slowly recovered with mother’s supervision.Over the next five years, she continued to battle anorexia.Finally seeking a therapist in 1981, she was only 35 kgs (76 pounds)! In addition to the extreme dieting, she was taking laxatives and thyroid medication to speed up her metabolism. Even trips to the therapist became another exercise routine to burn calories.She ended up in hospital in 1982 for extreme dehydration.Upon leaving hospital, although putting back on a bit of weight (13 kgs, 30 pounds) and having her menstrual cycle return, she once again showed signs of extreme tiredness and a lack of energy, sometimes calling it a night by 7 in the evening.On the 4th of February, 1983, she died at home in a walk-in wardrobe. In her mother’s own words: “She just laid down on the floor and that was it”.Her autopsy revealed that she had also been taking the vomit-inducing medication, ipecac.Her death was extremely tragic because not much was understood about anorexia at that time. To outsiders, the solution seemed so simple, just eat. However, her death did put anorexia in the spotlight, and today much more is understood about this insidious condition.Sources: Karen Carpenter - WikipediaHow Karen Carpenter's Death Changed the Way We Talk About AnorexiaKaren Carpenter: starved of love, by Randy Schmidt | ExtractKaren CarpenterImages: Getty Images
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What kinds of programs (if any) are there to help those leaving incarceration?
A newly released prisoner has a very low chance of making it back into society successfully. If the newly freed inmate has a support system (such as a family) waiting for him or is wealthy, then he has a chance. But, most families usually break up if the man (and sometimes the female) while incarcerated and if he is wealthy then he would be incarcerated in a “Club Med” style prison.There aren’t many, if any programs to help those being released from incarceration. As I just hinted at in the opening paragraph there is the family and then there is the church. I really want to touch on why there aren’t many programs or opportunities for the recently released people from prisons.The Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994The Housing Opportunity Program Extension Act of 1996 and the Quality Housing and Work Responsibility Act of 1998 makes it nearly impossible for a newly released person from prison to get public assistance for government housing which is paramount for some returning to public life.The Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994, H.R. 3355, Pub.L. 103–322, this was Bill Clinton’s (and Hillary’s in part) signature piece of legislature during his reign.The Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994 was made of of many sections which affected the newly released inmate in many ways:HousingEducationSocial servicesThere are restrictions on civic participation such as prohibitions on jury service and votingAs well as laws governing where former offenders can live, what kinds of jobs they can hold and even whether they get to keep their kidsFirearm ownershipThis piece of legislature came back to haunt not only Hillary Clinton, but Bill Clinton as well. Could it have been what prevented Hillary from obtaining the highest office in the land? It may have been partly the blame. This piece of legislation certainly helped lead to the increase in incarceration which led to the prison overcrowding problem.Jerry Brown and Bill Clinton later expressed regret over the portions of the measure that led to increased prison population like the three strikes provision.The Quality Housing and Work Responsibility Act of 1998Section 575(c) of the Quality Housing and Work Responsibility Act of 1998 gives the Public Housing Authority (PSA):access to adult criminal conviction records of the National Crime Information Center and other law enforcement agencies is extended to Section 8 applicants and tenants. PHAs may access criminal records for applicants and tenants of the PHA-administered certificate, voucher, and moderate rehabilitation for purposes of tenant screening and subsidy termination.Owners of federally assisted housing (including public housing and Section 8) must prohibit admission of persons who are subject to a lifetime registration requirement under a State sex offender registration program. Similar to criminal record checks under §575, PHAs must conduct the sex offender criminal history background checks and make further sex offender inquiries with State and local agencies on behalf of owners of federally assisted housing.So, if the ex con doesn’t have a support system waitig for him upon release from prison or jail, it is very likely that he will become homeless.The Higher Education Act of 1998One such program which was proven too help an ex con from returning to prison life and help the excon to reenter into society was education. Learning a trade and being certified is always a boost for a person to be gainfully employed. But the Higher Education Act authorized in 1998 includes an aid elimination penalty that bars certain students who have been convicted of state or federal drug crimes from receiving federal grants, loans or work assistance.One of the more controversial provisions of the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act overturned a section of the Higher Education Act of 1965 permitting prison inmates to receive a Pell Grant for higher education while they were incarcerated. The amendment is as follows:(a) IN GENERAL- Section 401(b)(8) of the Higher Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 1070a(b)(8)) is amended to read as follows:(8) No basic grant shall be awarded under this subpart to any individual who is incarcerated in any Federal or State penal institution.The Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996President Bill Clinton's Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996, which made it legal for states to deny cash assistance and food stamps to those convicted of drug felonies.“When individuals with drug convictions are denied food stamps and cash benefits, establishing economic stability upon reentry becomes more difficult, and it becomes more likely that they may return to criminal activity and drug use instead of maintaining sobriety and obtaining gainful employment,” said Elizabeth Farid, deputy director of the Legal Action Center's National HIRE Network.Many states have opted out of the law banning drug felons from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), as the food stamp program is now called, and Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF), the welfare program. Other states have modified the bans and made them less punitive. Because the federal government fully funds food stamps, allowing felons to receive them does not burden state budgets.One component of the PWRORA was a lifetime ban on the use of food stamps through the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program for people convicted of drug felonies. Although it applied to all 50 states by default, states were also given the option to opt out of the ban.Although PRWORA banned the receipt of SNAP and TANF benefits for individuals with felony drug convictions in 2001, it gave states the discretion to opt-out of or modify the ban, eight states and the District of Columbia had entirely opted out of the ban, while an additional 20 states had modified it.A 2011 review of state policies by the Legal Action Center [. . .] 37 states either fully or partially enforce the TANF ban, while 34 states either fully or partially enforce the SNAP ban. Of these states, 25 have modified the ban to allow individuals with felony drug convictions to receive TANF or SNAP benefits under certain circumstances.A bit of good news, as of 2014, 40 states had opted out of this policy, while ten had not. Ten states still have the food stamp ban. Lawmakers in three of them—West Virginia, Missouri and Delaware—have proposed legislation that would remove the ban. Eleven states maintain the TANF ban.Besides the hurdles that I’ve listed from the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994, H.R. 3355, Pub.L. 103–322 which prevents a newly released inmate into society, there is another barrier which keeps a newly freed man from [successfully] entering society: fees and fines.Fees and FinesEvery encounter with the criminal justice system today can give rise to a fee. There are application fees and co-payments for public defenders. Sentences include court costs, restitution, and contributions to various funds.Private probation companies charge $30 to $40 a month for supervision.Halfway houses charge for staying in themPeople sentenced to community service are required to buy $15 insurance policies for every week they workCriminals on probation and parole wear global positioning devices that monitor their where abouts — for a charge of as much as $16 a day.The Eighth AmendmentRelatively small fees can have devastating consequences for people who emerge from prison with no money, credit or prospects, and who live in fear of being sent back for failing to pay.There isn't even such a thing as a free court appointed lawyer anymore.Indeed, according to the American Bar Association, at least 15 states, including New Jersey and Connecticut, charge application fees to people seeking court-appointed lawyers. Washington has one of the longest lists of fees assessed to criminals, and it is diligent in trying to collect them."You're asking the people who can't afford to hire an attorney to pay anyway by making them pay through add-on fees," according to Judge James R. Thurman of the Magistrate Court in Lee County, Ga.In the last decade, counties and states have authorized prison officials to charge inmates for costs associated with incarceration dubbed “pay-to-stay” programs. These charges range from “per-diems” for their stays to charges for meals, toilet paper, clothing, medical co-pays, and dental fees. Many jurisdictions have begun charging inmates fees in order to collect any money they can to offset staggering correctional costs.In 2010, the mean annual state corrections expenditure per inmate was $28,323, although a quarter of states spent $40,175 or more.There are four major rationales behind charging inmates fees once they are incarcerated.Revenue stream helps to offset expensive incarceration budgetsFocuses on teaching inmates a lesson for their criminal actsJudges, and sheriffs can often gain the support of constituents by supporting inmate “pay-to-stay” feesReducing frivolous requests for services by inmatesAdvocates contend that charging individuals fines in jail "imposes an unnecessary burden on inmates" and as usual, disproportionately affecting "the indigent populations along with racial and ethnic minorities." In other words, this system effects mostly the poor and minorities.Advocates further point out that these policies generate barriers to re-entry of society and encourage a cycle of poverty that is difficult to escape. Incarcerated people who re-enter society are less likely to successfully reintegrate with hundreds if not thousands of dollars in fines hanging over their heads.The Eighth Amendment provides “[e]xcessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted.” As recently as 1998, the Supreme Court wrote,” [t]his Court has had little occasion to interpret, and has never actually applied, the Excessive Fines Clause.Any debate regarding the Eighth Amendment has tended to focus on the Eighth Amendment’s Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause, not the Excessive Fines Clause. However, some limitations on fine amounts are found in the Magna Carta.The Economic and Fiscal Prison System: ConclusionIt seems that when a person leaves the brick & mortar prison, they are entering an economic and fiscal prison. Which is worse? Some would argue the economic and fiscal prison system. This system does everything short of denying a person a successful re-entry into society but guarantees a life of fees, fines, and homelessness.So, as you see there really aren’t any services to help a newly released person from the system. All the traditional ones have either been legislated out of signNow or everything has a fee attacheed to it.Except for [what’s left of family members] there is still the church. There is usually a church group which visits prisons at least on a weekly basis and there is the prison chaplain which may have some connections on the outside or be able to give them some guidance.The lack of resources is the number one reason that people return to prison.
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