@RWPUSA Prostitution is now illegal, but in the past it was a legal occupation.
Ministry of Home Affairs Ordinance No. 44, "Regulations for the Control of Prostitutes," 18 years of age or older
Korea: Order No. 4 of the Inspector-General's Office,

@HowEyeRoll2 @RWPUSA "Regulations for the Control of Prostitutes in Houses for Rent," 17 years of age or older.
Taiwan: Ministry of Civil Affairs Circular No. 4, "Regulations for Control of Rental Houses and Prostitutes"; over 16 years of age.
Manchuria: Kanto Province Civil Affairs Office Ordinance
@HowEyeRoll2 @RWPUSA No. 11, "Regulations for Controlling Prostitutes", 17 years of age or older.

In both cases, the person had to appear before the police and register the business. In the case of inland areas(Japan),
@HowEyeRoll2 @RWPUSA the required documents included the consent of the parents and the proof of the parents' seal impression. This was also necessary to prevent crimes of kidnapping and forced prostitution.

1. Reasons for becoming a prostitute
2. Date of birth
@HowEyeRoll2 @RWPUSA 3. Recently, If there is no nearest relative in the same family register, the consent of the head of the family must be obtained. If there is no one to give consent, the fact need to be provide.
@HowEyeRoll2 @RWPUSA 4. In the case of minors, in addition to the above, the approval of the biological father, the biological mother if the biological father is not available, the biological grandfather if the biological parents are not available,
@HowEyeRoll2 @RWPUSA and the biological grandmother if the biological grandfather is not available.
5. the place where the prostitute earns money
6. address after registration in the prostitute registry
7. current occupation;
@HowEyeRoll2 @RWPUSA however, if the prostitute earns a living by others, the fact need to be provided.
8. existence of the fact that the person was a prostitute. 8. Whether or not the person was a prostitute, and if the person was a prostitute, the date and place of commencement of the business,
@HowEyeRoll2 @RWPUSA the address when the person was a prostitute, and the reason for quitting the business.
9. the matters specified by the prefectural government's ordinance in addition to the above items,
@HowEyeRoll2 @RWPUSA and a copy of the family register prepared by the family register historian for the application mentioned in the preceding paragraph.

There was a time when prostitution was recognized as a profession, but it was not easy to operate. In those days, the police had a lot of power.
@HowEyeRoll2 @RWPUSA Be careful about the stories of self-proclaimed Korean comfort women who take advantage of the conscription system.
@HowEyeRoll2 @RWPUSA @threadreaderapp unroll please

More from Legal

1/ On Jan 2 we introduced Proud Boy Billy Knutson to the world. Billy said he was going to DC to "literally go Antifa hunting."

Well, Proud Boy Billy Knutson stormed the U.S. capitol with his fellow terrorists and participated in a failed coup:
https://t.co/Ctb7vThYhs


2/ Terrorist Proud Boy Billy Knutson placing himself at the scene of the failed coup in DC to overthrow democracy:


3/ From terrorist Proud Boy Billy Knutson's Parler in his own words:

PS: We see Texas Charter Plane 5 Jenna Ryan made the big time at the failed U.S. coup in DC


4/ FAIR USE claim: shows context in tweets

Terrorist Proud Boy Billy Knutson's Parler video where you can hear him screaming, "Stand Back and Stand By Motherf*ckers!" while standing on the US capitol steps. Speaker says they'll be back on Inauguration Day.


5/ Terrorist Proud Boy Billy Knutson already lost his Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, & Twitter before heading to DC

However @Spotify & @YouTube continue to platform Billy Knutson, aka Playboy The Beast, a terrorist that participated in the U.S. failed
A detention hearing is about to start in federal court in Arkansas in the case of Richard Barnett, the man photographed sitting in Nancy Pelosi's office (see: https://t.co/GAAENhkxf0). He's been in custody since his arrest

Prosecutors alleged Barnett was carrying a stun gun. He's charged with entering a restricted area w/ a weapon, violent entry/disorderly conduct, and theft. There isn't anything on the docket indicating what the govt/Barnett will be seeking as far as detention v. release


We're still waiting for the Richard Barnett detention hearing to start in Arkansas. Meanwhile, follow @o_ema for updates on initial appearances in DC federal court today for a few of the Capitol insurrection arrestees -->


Richard Barnett's detention hearing is underway in Arkansas — Judge Erin Wiedemann will decide if Barnett should stay behind bars. The first witness is FBI special agent Jonathan Willett, who was involved in the Capitol riot investigation

FBI agent walks the judge through surveillance videos that the agent says show Barnett walking in and out of Nancy Pelosi's office, with a "walking stick Taser" on his hip, as well as the widely disseminated photos of Barnett sitting in Pelosi's chair with his feet up

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I like this heuristic, and have a few which are similar in intent to it:


Hiring efficiency:

How long does it take, measured from initial expression of interest through offer of employment signed, for a typical candidate cold inbounding to the company?

What is the *theoretical minimum* for *any* candidate?

How long does it take, as a developer newly hired at the company:

* To get a fully credentialed machine issued to you
* To get a fully functional development environment on that machine which could push code to production immediately
* To solo ship one material quanta of work

How long does it take, from first idea floated to "It's on the Internet", to create a piece of marketing collateral.

(For bonus points: break down by ambitiousness / form factor.)

How many people have to say yes to do something which is clearly worth doing which costs $5,000 / $15,000 / $250,000 and has never been done before.
Recently, the @CNIL issued a decision regarding the GDPR compliance of an unknown French adtech company named "Vectaury". It may seem like small fry, but the decision has potential wide-ranging impacts for Google, the IAB framework, and today's adtech. It's thread time! 👇

It's all in French, but if you're up for it you can read:
• Their blog post (lacks the most interesting details):
https://t.co/PHkDcOT1hy
• Their high-level legal decision: https://t.co/hwpiEvjodt
• The full notification: https://t.co/QQB7rfynha

I've read it so you needn't!

Vectaury was collecting geolocation data in order to create profiles (eg. people who often go to this or that type of shop) so as to power ad targeting. They operate through embedded SDKs and ad bidding, making them invisible to users.

The @CNIL notes that profiling based off of geolocation presents particular risks since it reveals people's movements and habits. As risky, the processing requires consent — this will be the heart of their assessment.

Interesting point: they justify the decision in part because of how many people COULD be targeted in this way (rather than how many have — though they note that too). Because it's on a phone, and many have phones, it is considered large-scale processing no matter what.